(2953) Vysheslavia

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Asteroid
(2953) Vysheslavia
Properties of the orbit ( animation )
Epoch:  April 27, 2019 ( JD 2,458,600.5)
Orbit type Outer main belt
Asteroid family Koronis family
Major semi-axis 2.8287 ± 0.0001  AU
eccentricity 0.0213 ± 0.0003
Perihelion - aphelion 2.7685 ± 0.001 AU - 2.889 ± 0.0001 AU
Inclination of the orbit plane 1.0726 ± 0.0407 °
Length of the ascending node 250.9232 ± 0.0002 °
Argument of the periapsis 13.4169 ± 0.0003 °
Time of passage of the perihelion December 20, 2020
Sidereal period 4.76 a ± 0.1103 d
Physical Properties
Medium diameter 12.546 ± 0.097 km
Albedo 0.257 ± 0.038
Rotation period 6.2945 h
Absolute brightness 11.8 mag
Spectral class SMASSII: S.
history
Explorer Soviet Union 1955Soviet Union/ Nikolai Stepanowitsch TschernychRussia Soviet Federal Socialist RepublicRussian SFSR 
Date of discovery September 24, 1979
Another name 1979 SV 11 ; 1951 YG 1 ; 1969 RU 1 ; 1975 XR 5 ; 1978 PQ; 2003 YK 156
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.

(2953) Vysheslavia ( 1979 SV 11 ; 1951 YG 1 ; 1969 RU 1 ; 1975 XR 5 ; 1978 PQ ; 2003 YK 156 ) is an approximately 13-kilometer asteroid of the main outer belt that was separated from the Russian (then: Soviet Union ) astronomer Nikolai Stepanowitsch Tschernych at the Crimean Observatory (Nautschnyj branch) on the Crimean peninsula ( IAU code 095). It belongs to the Koronis family , a group of asteroids named after (158) Koronis .

designation

(2953) Vysheslavia was named after the Soviet- Ukrainian writer and literary critic Leonid Wyscheslavskyj (1914–2002).

See also

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Lutz D. Schmadel : Dictionary of Minor Planet Names . Fifth Revised and Enlarged Edition. Ed .: Lutz D. Schmadel. 5th edition. Springer Verlag , Berlin , Heidelberg 2003, ISBN 978-3-540-29925-7 , pp.  186 (English, 992 pp., Link.springer.com [ONLINE; accessed on September 25, 2019] Original title: Dictionary of Minor Planet Names . First edition: Springer Verlag, Berlin, Heidelberg 1992): “1979 SV 11 . Discovered 1979 Sept. 24 by NS Chernykh at Nauchnyj. "
predecessor asteroid successor
(2952) Lilliputia numbering (2954) Delsemme