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8405 Asbolus

Centaur


Centaur

FieldValue
minorplanetyes
name8405 Asbolus
background#C7FF8F
symbol[[File:Asbolus symbol (bold).svg24px]] (astrological)
discovery_ref
discovererSpacewatch
discovery_siteKitt Peak Obs.
discovered5 April 1995
mpc_name(8405) Asbolus
alt_names1995 GO
pronounced
named_afterΆσβολος Asbolos
(Greek mythology)
mp_categorydistantcentaur
orbit_ref
epoch4 September 2017 (JD 2458000.5)
uncertainty1
observation_arc16.60 yr (6,063 days)
aphelion29.118 AU
perihelion6.8145 AU
time_periastron
semimajor17.966 AU
eccentricity0.6207
period76.15 yr (27,815 days)
mean_anomaly71.410°
mean_motion/ day
inclination17.638°
asc_node6.1324°
arg_peri290.06°
mean_diameter
76 km
km
80.83 km (derived)
km
km
rotation
h
h
h
h
albedo
0.05
0.057 (assumed)
spectral_typeBR
abs_magnitude8.749.19.189.19 (R)9.26

(Greek mythology) 76 km km 80.83 km (derived) km km h h h h 0.05

0.057 (assumed)

8405 Asbolus is a centaur orbiting in the outer Solar System between the orbits of Jupiter and Neptune. It was discovered on 5 April 1995, by James Scotti and Robert Jedicke of Spacewatch (credited) at Kitt Peak Observatory in Arizona, United States. It is named after Asbolus, a centaur in Greek mythology and measures approximately 80 kilometers in diameter.

Orbit and classification

Centaurs have short dynamical lifetimes due to perturbations by the giant planets. Asbolus is estimated to have an orbital half-life of about 860 kiloannum. Asbolus is currently classified as a SN centaur since Saturn is considered to control the perihelion and Neptune controls the aphelion.

It currently has a perihelion of 6.8 AU, so it is also influenced by Jupiter. Centaurs with a perihelion less than 6.6 AU are very strongly influenced by Jupiter and for classification purposes are considered to have a perihelion under the control of Jupiter. In about ten thousand years, clones of the orbit of Asbolus suggest that its perihelion classification may come under the control of Jupiter.

Predicting the overall orbit and position of Asbolus beyond a few thousand years is difficult because of errors in the known trajectory, error amplification by perturbations due to all of the giant planets, and the possibility of perturbation as a result of cometary outgassing and fragmentation. Compared to centaur 7066 Nessus, the orbit of Asbolus is currently much more chaotic.

Naming

This minor planet was named from Greek mythology after Asbolus (Greek for "sooty", "the black one"), a centaur capable to read omens in the flight of birds. He provoked a bloodbath in which the centaurs Chiron and Pholus met their deaths at Heracles's hands. The minor planets 2060 Chiron, 5145 Pholus and 5143 Heracles are named after these mythological figures. The official naming citation was published on 28 September 1999 (M.P.C. ).

Physical characteristics

Infographic showing a comparison of sizes, albedo, and colors of various large centaurs
Comparison of sizes, albedos, and colors of various large centaurs with measured diameters. Asbolus is at the left in the bottom row.

No resolved images of it have ever been made, but in 1998 spectral analysis of its composition by the Hubble Space Telescope revealed a fresh impact crater on its surface, less than 10 million years old. Centaurs are dark in colour, because their icy surfaces have darkened after long exposure to solar radiation and the solar wind. However, fresh craters excavate more reflective ice from below the surface, and that is what Hubble has detected on Asbolus.

References

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|access-date=12 April 2004}}

|doi-access= free

|access-date= 26 April 2009 |url-status = dead |archive-url= https://www.webcitation.org/6Hmvuihrv?url=http://home.surewest.net/kheider/astro/Asbolus13kd.gif |archive-date= 1 July 2013}}

|access-date=2 May 2009 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150913215558/http://home.surewest.net/kheider/astro/AsbolusClones.txt |archive-date=13 September 2015

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