- Source: 149 Medusa
149 Medusa is a bright-coloured, stony main-belt asteroid that was discovered by French astronomer J. Perrotin on September 21, 1875, and named after the Gorgon Medusa, a snake-haired monster in Greek mythology. It is orbiting the Sun at a distance of 2.17 AU with a period of 3.21 years and an eccentricity of 0.065. The orbital plane is tilted slightly at an angle of 0.94° to the plane of the ecliptic.
When it was discovered, Medusa was by far the smallest asteroid found (although this was not known at that time). Since then, many thousands of smaller asteroids have been found. It was also the closest asteroid to the Sun discovered up to that point, beating the long-held record of 8 Flora. It remained the closest asteroid to the Sun until 433 Eros and 434 Hungaria were found in 1898, leading to the discovery of two new families of asteroids inward from the 4:1 Kirkwood gap which forms the boundary of the main belt.
Photometric observations of this asteroid at the Organ Mesa Observatory in Las Cruces, New Mexico, during 2010 gave a light curve with a rather long rotation period of 26.038 ± 0.002 hours and a brightness variation of 0.56 ± 0.03 in magnitude.
References
External links
149 Medusa at AstDyS-2, Asteroids—Dynamic Site
Ephemeris · Observation prediction · Orbital info · Proper elements · Observational info
149 Medusa at the JPL Small-Body Database
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- 8 Flora
- Daftar planet minor/101–200
- Daftar planet minor: 1–1000
- Daftar episode The X-Files
- 149 Medusa
- 149
- Medusa (disambiguation)
- 8 Flora
- Henri Joseph Anastase Perrotin
- Meanings of minor-planet names: 1–1000
- List of minor planets: 1–1000
- Medusa (comics)
- 186 Celuta
- 140 Siwa