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39 Laetitia

Main-belt asteroid


Main-belt asteroid

FieldValue
minorplanetyes
background#D6D6D6
image39 Laetitia Image.png
name39 Laetitia
discovererJ. Chacornac
discovered8 February 1856
mpc_name(39) Laetitia
pronounced
named_afterLaetitia
mp_categoryMain belt
orbit_ref
epoch31 December 2006 (JD 2454100.5)
semimajor414.190 million km (2.769 AU)
perihelion366.877 million km (2.452 AU)
aphelion461.503 million km (3.085 AU)
eccentricity0.114
period1682.713 day
inclination10.383°
asc_node157.168°
arg_peri209.560°
mean_anomaly58.261°
dimensions{{Ubl
{{Val219x142ukm}}
149.5&nbsp;km<ref namejpldata/
{{Val153.804.14ukm}}
mass
density
rotation0.2141 d (5.138 h)
spectral_typeS
magnitude8.97 to 12.18
abs_magnitude6.1
albedo0.287 (geometric)
angular_size0.142–0.051

| | 149.5 km | 39 Laetitia is a large main-belt asteroid that was discovered by French astronomer Jean Chacornac on 9 February 1856 and named after Laetitia, a minor Roman goddess of gaiety. The spectrum matches an S-type, indicating a stony (silicate) composition. It is orbiting the Sun with a period of 1682.713 day and is spinning on its axis once every 5.1 hours.

Photometric observations of this asteroid gathered between 1968 and 1974 were used to build a light curve that provided shape and rotation information. It has the general shape of an elongated triaxial ellipsoid with ratios between the lengths of the axes equal to 15:9:5. Major surface features are on a scale of 10 km and the surface color does not vary significantly across the surface. In the ecliptic coordinate system, the pole of rotation is estimated to be oriented to the coordinates (λ0, β0) = (, ).

In 1988 a search for satellites or dust orbiting this asteroid was performed using the UH88 telescope at the Mauna Kea Observatories, but the effort came up empty. Photometric observations collected during 2006–08 were used to measure time variations of the asteroid light curve. This data suggests that the asteroid may have a complex shape or it could be a binary asteroid system. Observations of an occultation on 21 March 1998, produced several chords indicating an ellipsoidal cross-section of .

References

References

  1. John Craig (1869) ''The Universal English Dictionary''
Info: Wikipedia Source

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