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452 Hamiltonia

Main-belt asteroid


Main-belt asteroid

FieldValue
minorplanetyes
name452 Hamiltonia
background#D6D6D6
discovererJames Edward Keeler
discovery_siteMount Hamilton
discovered6 December 1899
mpc_name(452) Hamiltonia
pronounced
alt_names1899 FD
named_afterMount Hamilton
mp_categorymain belt
orbit_ref
epoch31 July 2016 (JD 2457600.5)
semimajor2.8488107 AU
perihelion2.8064929 AU
aphelion2.8911284 AU
eccentricity0.0148545
period4.81 yr (1756.3 d)
inclination3.223518°
asc_node92.53125°
arg_peri69.71870°
mean_anomaly9.4952678°
rotation2.8813 h
abs_magnitude11.9
mean_motion/ day
observation_arc116.35 yr (42497 d)
uncertainty0

452 Hamiltonia is an asteroid. It was discovered by James Edward Keeler on 6 December 1899, but was then lost until 1981. Its provisional name was 1899 FD. The asteroid is named for Mount Hamilton, the site of Lick Observatory where Keeler was working when he discovered the asteroid. It was the last asteroid discovery of the 1800s.

L. K. Kristensen at Aarhus University rediscovered 452 Hamiltonia along with 1537 Transylvania along with numerous other small objects in 1981.(1537) Transylvania and (452) Hamiltonia Kristensen, L. K.; Gibson, J.; Shao, C.-Y.; Bowell, E.; Marsden, B. G. IAU Circ., 3595, 1 (1981). Edited by Marsden, B. G. http://adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/1981IAUC.3595....1K These rediscoveries left only nine numbered minor planets unobserved since their discoveries: 330 Adalberta (which never existed in the first place), 473 Nolli, 719 Albert, 724 Hapag, 843 Nicolaia, 878 Mildred, 1009 Sirene, 1026 Ingrid, and 1179 Mally. However, by the mid-1980s the only remaining lost asteroids of this group were 719 Albert (rediscovered in 2000), 724 Hapag (rediscovered in 1988), and 878 Mildred (rediscovered in 1991).

References

References

  1. "452 Hamiltonia (A899 XB)". [[NASA]]/[[Jet Propulsion Laboratory]].
  2. Cowen, Ron. (2000-05-20). "Astronomers Rediscover Long-Lost Asteroid". [[Science News]].
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