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5261 Eureka

Trojan asteroid of Mars


Trojan asteroid of Mars

FieldValue
minorplanetyes
background#FA8072
name5261 Eureka
discovery_ref
discovererDavid H. Levy and Henry Holt
discovered20 June 1990
alt_names1990 MB
named_afterEureka
pronounced
mp_category
orbit_ref
epoch13 January 2016 (JD 2457400.5)
aphelion1.6222 AU
perihelion1.4249 AU
semimajor1.5236 AU
eccentricity0.064766
period1.88 yr (686.89 d)
inclination20.280°
asc_node245.057°
arg_peri95.456°
mean_anomaly145.29°
avg_speed24.11 km/s
satellites1
dimensions1.3 km
~2–4 km[H](https://web.archive.org/web/20010302182040/http://neo.jpl.nasa.gov/glossary/h.html)
abs_magnitude16.0, 16.1
single_temperature~250 K
spectral_typeS(I) (Gaffey)
albedo0.39
mean_motion/ day
rotation2.6902 h
observation_arc13267 days (36.32 yr)
uncertainty0
moid0.497052 AU
jupiter_moid3.52162 AU
tisserand4.428

~2–4 kmH

5261 Eureka is the first Mars trojan discovered. It was discovered by David H. Levy and Henry Holt at Palomar Observatory on 20 June 1990. It trails Mars (at the ) at a distance varying by only 0.3 AU during each revolution (with a secular trend superimposed, changing the distance from 1.5–1.8 AU around 1850 to 1.3–1.6 AU around 2400). Minimum distances from Earth, Venus, and Jupiter, are 0.5, 0.8, and 3.5 AU, respectively.

Long-term numerical integration shows that the orbit is stable. Kimmo A. Innanen and Seppo Mikkola note that "contrary to intuition, there is clear empirical evidence for the stability of motion around the and points of all the terrestrial planets over a timeframe of several million years".

Since the discovery of 5261 Eureka, the Minor Planet Center has recognized three other asteroids as Martian trojans: at the point, at the point, At least five other asteroids in near-1:1 resonances with Mars have been discovered, but they do not exhibit trojan behavior. They are , , (36017) 1999 ND43, and (152704) 1998 SD4. Due to close orbital similarities, most of the other, smaller, members of the L5 group are hypothesized to be fragments of 5261 Eureka that were detached after it was spun up by the YORP effect (consistent with its rotational period of 2.69 h).

The infrared spectrum for 5261 Eureka is typical for an A-type asteroid, but the visual spectrum is consistent with an evolved form of achondrite called an angrite. A-class asteroids are tinted red in hue, with a moderate albedo. The asteroid is located deep within a stable Lagrangian zone of Mars, which is considered indicative of a primordial origin—meaning the asteroid has most likely been in this orbit for much of the history of the Solar System.

Satellite

On 28 November 2011, a natural satellite of 5261 Eureka was found. This unnamed moon is about 0.46 km in diameter and orbits 2.1 km from Eureka. The satellite's existence was announced in September 2014.

References

References

  1. {{OED. Eureka
  2. "List of Martian Trojans".
  3. and {{mpl. (311999) 2007 NS. 2, also at the {{L5 point.[https://www.minorplanetcenter.net/mpec/K07/K07O09.html MPEC 2007-O09 : 2007 NS2]
  4. (2017-10-20). "Sun's light touch explains asteroids flying in formation behind Mars". Science.
  5. Johnston, Robert. (16 November 2014). "(5261) Eureka". Johnston's Archive.
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