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Amor asteroid

Group of near-Earth asteroids


Group of near-Earth asteroids

The Amor asteroids are a group of near-Earth asteroids named after the archetype object 1221 Amor . The orbital perihelion of these objects is close to, but greater than, the orbital aphelion of Earth (i.e., the objects do not cross Earth's orbit), with most Amors crossing the orbit of Mars. The Amor asteroid 433 Eros was the first asteroid to be orbited and landed upon by a robotic space probe (NEAR Shoemaker).

Definition

The orbital characteristics that define an asteroid as being in the Amor group are:

  • The orbital period is greater than one year; i.e., the orbital semi-major axis (a) is greater than 1.0 AU (a 1.0 AU);
  • The orbit does not cross that of Earth; i.e., the orbital perihelion (q) is greater than Earth's orbital aphelion (q 1.017 AU);
  • The object is a near-Earth object (NEO); i.e., q

Populations

As of January 2025 there are 15,175 known Amor asteroids. Of those objects, 1414 are numbered, 83 are named, and 42 are designated as a potentially hazardous asteroid.

Outer Earth-grazer asteroids

An outer Earth-grazer asteroid is an asteroid that is normally beyond Earth's orbit, but which can get closer to the Sun than Earth's aphelion (1.0167 AU), and not closer than Earth's perihelion (0.9833 AU); i.e., the asteroid's perihelion is between Earth's perihelion and aphelion. Outer Earth-grazer asteroids are split between Amor and Apollo asteroids. Using the definition of Amor asteroids above, "Earth grazers" that never get closer to the Sun than Earth does (at any point along its orbit) are Amors, whereas those that do are Apollos.

Potentially hazardous asteroids

To be considered a potentially hazardous asteroid (PHA), an object's orbit must, at some point, come within 0.05 AU of Earth's orbit, and the object itself must be sufficiently large/massive to cause significant regional damage if it impacted Earth. Most PHAs are either Aten asteroids or Apollo asteroids (and thus have orbits that cross the orbit of Earth), and as of November 2023 70 Amors are classified as a PHA, the named objects 2061 Anza, 3122 Florence, 3908 Nyx, and 3671 Dionysus.

Lists

List of named Amor asteroids

Prominent Amor asteroids

NameYearDiscovererclass="unsortable"Refs
3908 Nyx1980Hans-Emil Schuster
1221 Amor1932Eugène Delporte
1036 Ganymed1924Walter Baade
887 Alinda1918Max Wolf
719 Albert1911Johann Palisa
433 Eros1898Gustav Witt

Named Amor asteroids

This is a non-static list of named Amor asteroids.

DesignationProv. designation
433 Eros1898 DQ
719 Albert1911 MT
887 Alinda1918 DB
1036 Ganymed1924 TD
1221 Amor1932 EA1
1580 Betulia1950 KA
1627 Ivar1929 SH
1915 Quetzalcoatl1953 EA
1916 Boreas1953 RA
1917 Cuyo1968 AA
1943 Anteros1973 EC
1980 Tezcatlipoca1950 LA
2059 Baboquivari1963 UA
2061 Anza1960 UA
2202 Pele1972 RA
2368 Beltrovata1977 RA
2608 Seneca1978 DA
3102 Krok1981 QA
3122 Florence1981 ET3
3199 Nefertiti1982 RA
3271 Ul1982 RB
3288 Seleucus1982 DV
3352 McAuliffe1981 CW
3551 Verenia1983 RD
3552 Don Quixote1983 SA
DesignationProv. designation
3553 Mera1985 JA
3671 Dionysus1984 KD
3691 Bede1982 FT
3757 Anagolay1982 XB
3908 Nyx1980 PA
3988 Huma1986 LA
4055 Magellan1985 DO2
4401 Aditi1985 TB
4487 Pocahontas1987 UA
4503 Cleobulus1989 WM
4947 Ninkasi1988 TJ1
4954 Eric1990 SQ
4957 Brucemurray1990 XJ
5324 Lyapunov1987 SL
5332 Davidaguilar1990 DA
5370 Taranis1986 RA
5620 Jasonwheeler1990 OA
5626 Melissabrucker1991 FE
5653 Camarillo1992 WD5
5751 Zao1992 AC
5797 Bivoj1980 AA
5863 Tara1983 RB
5869 Tanith1988 VN4
5879 Almeria1992 CH1
6050 Miwablock1992 AE
DesignationProv. designation
164215 Doloreshill2004 MF6
189011 Ogmios1997 NJ6
280244 Ati2002 WP11
452307 Manawydan1997 XV11
481984 Cernunnos2009 KL2
520585 Saci2014 OA2
605911 Cecily2016 XD1
679829 Sucellos2021 EC5
785648 Likho2015 RG36

References

References

  1. "Amor asteroid". Созвездия.ру.
  2. "NEO Groups". NASA/JPL Near-Earth Object Program Office.
  3. "Small-Body Database Query". NASA - California Institute of Technology.
  4. "List of Amor Minor Planets". Center for Astrophysics.
  5. "List Of The Potentially Hazardous Asteroids (PHAs)". IAU - Minor Planet Center.
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