(7624) Gluck
Asteroid (7624) Gluck |
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Properties of the orbit ( animation ) | |
Orbit type | Outer main belt |
Asteroid family | Eos family |
Major semi-axis | 3.0505 AU |
eccentricity | 0.1087 |
Perihelion - aphelion | 2.7189 AU - 3.3821 AU |
Inclination of the orbit plane | 9.1264 ° |
Length of the ascending node | 349.6536 ° |
Argument of the periapsis | 34.1462 ° |
Sidereal period | 5.33 a |
Mean orbital velocity | 17.05 km / s |
Physical Properties | |
Medium diameter | 8.335 ± 0.211 km |
Albedo | 0.193 ± 0.037 |
Absolute brightness | 12.9 mag |
history | |
Explorer |
Cornelis Johannes van Houten , Ingrid van Houten-Groeneveld , Tom Gehrels |
Date of discovery | March 25, 1971 |
Another name | 1251 T-1 , 1995 UZ 6 |
Source: Unless otherwise stated, the data comes from JPL Small-Body Database Browser . The affiliation to an asteroid family is automatically determined from the AstDyS-2 database . Please also note the note on asteroid items. |
(7624) Gluck is an asteroid of the main belt that was discovered on March 25, 1971 by the Dutch astronomer couple Cornelis Johannes van Houten and Ingrid van Houten-Groeneveld . The discovery was made during the first Trojan survey , during which Tom Gehrels surveyed field plates recorded at the University of Leiden with the 120 cm Oschin Schmidt telescope of the Palomar observatory ( IAU code 675) .
It was named after the German composer Christoph Willibald Gluck (1714–1787), who is considered one of the most important opera composers of the second half of the 18th century.
The celestial body belongs to the Eos family, a group of asteroids, which typically have large semi-axes from 2.95 to 3.1 AU , bounded inward by the Kirkwood gap of the 7: 3 resonance with Jupiter , and orbital inclinations between 8 ° and 12 °. The group is named after the asteroid (221) Eos . The family is believed to have emerged from a collision more than a billion years ago.
See also
Individual evidence
- ↑ The family membership of (7624) Gluck in the AstDyS-2 database (English)
- ↑ David Vokrouhlický , Miroslav Brož , Alessandro Morbidelli , William Bottke , David Nesvorný , Daniel Lazzaro, Andy Rivkin: Yarkovsky footprints in the Eos family (PDF, English)
Web links
- Asteroid Gluck: Discovery Circumstances according to the Minor Planet Center of the International Astronomical Union at the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics, Cambridge, USA
- Asteroid Gluck in the Small-Body Database of NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory at the California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, USA
- (7624) Gluck in the database of the "Asteroids - Dynamic Site" (AstDyS-2, English).