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490 Veritas

Main-belt asteroid


Main-belt asteroid

FieldValue
minorplanetyes
background#D6D6D6
name490 Veritas
discovererMax Wolf
discovered3 September 1902
discovery_siteHeidelberg Obs.
mpc_name(490) Veritas
alt_names1902 JP
mp_categorymain-belt(outer)
Veritas
pronounced
adjectiveVeritasian
epoch31 July 2016 (JD 2457600.5)
orbit_ref
eccentricity0.094527
semimajor3.1717 AU
perihelion2.8719 AU
aphelion3.4715 AU
period5.65 yr (2063.2 d)
inclination9.2809°
asc_node178.335°
arg_peri194.390°
mean_anomaly31.094°
dimensions110.96 ± 3.80 km
mass(5.99 ± 2.23) × 1018 kg
density8.37 ± 3.23 g/cm3
abs_magnitude8.53, 8.32
mean_motion/ day
observation_arc113.37 yr (41409 d)
uncertainty0
rotation7.930 h
albedo
moid1.87147 AU
jupiter_moid1.98443 AU
tisserand3.175

Veritas

490 Veritas is a carbonaceous Veritasian asteroid, which may have been involved in one of the more massive asteroid-asteroid collisions of the past 100 million years. It was discovered by German astronomer Max Wolf at Heidelberg Observatory on 3 September 1902.

Description

With a diameter of more than 100 kilometers, Veritas is the largest member and namesake of the Veritas family, a mid-sized asteroid family of carbonaceous asteroids in the outer main-belt, that formed recently approximately million years ago. David Nesvorný of the Southwest Research Institute in Boulder traced the orbits of these bodies back in time, and calculated that they formed in a collision of a body at least 150 km in diameter with a smaller asteroid. Veritas and Undina would have been the largest fragments of that collision which caused a "late Miocene dust shower". The family consists of more than a thousand known members including 1086 Nata, 2428 Kamenyar and 2934 Aristophanes.

Late Miocene dust shower

Substantiating Nesvorný's estimate, Kenneth Farley et al. found evidence in sea-floor sediments of a fourfold increase in the amount of cosmic dust reaching Earth's surface, which began 8.2 million years ago and tapered off over the next million and a half years. This is one of the largest increases in dust deposits of the past 100 million years.

The suspected Veritas collision would have been too far from Jupiter for the fragments to have been slung into a collision course with Earth. However, solar radiation would have caused the resulting dust to drift inward to Earth orbit over a time span consistent with the record of dust in the ocean sediment.

Today continuing collisions among Veritas-family asteroids are estimated to send five thousand tons of cosmic dust to Earth each year, 15% of the total.

Study

490 Veritas has been observed to occult 13 stars between 2006 and 2023.

References

References

  1. Noah Webster (1884) ''A Practical Dictionary of the English Language''
  2. James Morrow (1990) ''City of Truth''
Info: Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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