- Source: 365 Corduba
365 Corduba is a very large main-belt asteroid that was discovered by the French astronomer Auguste Charlois on 21 March 1893 from Nice. It is classified as a C-type asteroid and is probably composed of carbonaceous material.
Photometric observations of this asteroid at the Palmer Divide Observatory in Colorado Springs, Colorado, during 2007 gave a light curve with a period of 6.551 ± 0.002 hours and a brightness variation of 0.05 in magnitude. This differs somewhat from a 2004 study that gave a period of 6.354 hours, but this difference may be explained by the small magnitude variation which tends to increase the randomizing effect of noise in the data.
References
External links
Lightcurve plot of 365 Corduba, Palmer Divide Observatory, B. D. Warner (2007)
Asteroid Lightcurve Database (LCDB), query form (info Archived 16 December 2017 at the Wayback Machine)
Dictionary of Minor Planet Names, Google books
Asteroids and comets rotation curves, CdR – Observatoire de Genève, Raoul Behrend
Discovery Circumstances: Numbered Minor Planets (1)-(5000) – Minor Planet Center
365 Corduba at AstDyS-2, Asteroids—Dynamic Site
Ephemeris · Observation prediction · Orbital info · Proper elements · Observational info
365 Corduba at the JPL Small-Body Database
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Daftar planet minor/301–400
- Daftar planet minor: 1–1000
- 365 Corduba
- Córdoba
- 366 Vincentina
- Meanings of minor-planet names: 1–1000
- 364 Isara
- List of minor planets: 1–1000
- Auguste Charlois
- List of named minor planets: 1–999
- List of named minor planets: C
- Lucius Antistius Rusticus