230 Athamantis

Main-belt asteroid From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

230 Athamantis is a fairly large main-belt asteroid that was discovered by the German-Austrian astronomer K. de Ball on September 3, 1882, in Bothkamp. It was his only asteroid discovery. The asteroid was named after Athamantis, daughter of Athamas the mythical Greek king of Orchomenus.

Discoverydate3 September 1882
(230) Athamantis
Quick facts Discovery, Discovered by ...
230 Athamantis
Discovery
Discovered byK. de Ball
Discovery date3 September 1882
Designations
(230) Athamantis
Pronunciation/æθəˈmæntɪs/
Named after
Helle
1949 WG
Main belt
Orbital characteristics[1]
Epoch 31 July 2016 (JD 2457600.5)
Uncertainty parameter 0
Observation arc133.58 yr (48791 d)
Aphelion2.52818 AU (378.210 Gm)
Perihelion2.23641 AU (334.562 Gm)
2.38229 AU (356.386 Gm)
Eccentricity0.06124
3.68 yr (1343.0 d)
19.3 km/s
116.2°
0° 16m 4.969s / day
Inclination9.443°
239.9°
139.1°
Physical characteristics
118±2 km[2]
111.332±1.231 km[1]
110.17 ± 4.57 km[3]
Flattening0.24[a]
Mass(2.3±1.1)×1018 kg[2]
(1.89±0.19)×1018 kg[3]
Mean density
2.7±1.3 g/cm3[2]
2.69±0.43 g/cm3[3]
24.0055 h (1.00023 d)[1]
23.99 h[4]
0.146 (calculated)[2]
0.164±0.029[1]
S
7.53[1]
Close

Photometric observations of this asteroid gave a light curve with a period of 23.99 hours and a brightness variation of more than 0.20 in magnitude.[4] It has the spectrum of an S-type asteroid. During 1991, the asteroid was observed occulting a star. The resulting chords provided a cross-section diameter estimate of 101.8 km.[5]

A three-dimensional model of 230 Athamantis based on its light curve

Notes

  1. Flattening derived from the maximum aspect ratio (c/a): , where (c/a) = 0.76±0.07.[2]

References

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