Salome (asteroid)
Salome 562 Salome | |
---|---|
Temporary mark, another name | 1905 QH |
Classification | Asteroid |
Orbital kind | Asteroid belt (Eos group) |
Discovery | |
Discovery day | 1905April 3 |
Detector | Max Wolff |
An orbital element and property Epoch: May 14, 2008 (JD 2,454,600.5) | |
Orbit semimajor axis (a) | 3.021 AU |
Perihelion distance (q) | 2.734 AU |
Aphelion distance (Q) | 3.309 AU |
Eccentricity (e) | 0.095 |
Revolution period (P) | 5.25 Year |
Orbit angle of inclination (i) | 11.13 Degree |
Perihelion argument (ω) | 261.73 Degree |
Ascending node celestial longitude (Ω) | 70.79 Degree |
Mean anomaly (M) | 112.71 Degree |
Physical property | |
Diameter | 30.68 km |
Spectral class | S |
Absolute magnitude (H) | 9.95 |
Albedo (albedo) | 0.1967 |
Color index (B-V) | 0.794 |
Color index (U-B) | 0.415 |
■Template (■ notebook ■ commentary )■ Project |
Salome (562 Salome) is an asteroid of the asteroid belts. I was discovered at ケーニッヒシュトゥール astronomical observatory of Heidelberg by max Wolff.
I was named for daughter Salome of the Herod the Great who appeared to opera "Salome" of Richard Strauss who assumed drama "Salome" of Oscar Wilde the original.
Allied item
Outside link
An asteroid in front: Inge Velde (asteroid) | Asteroid Salome (asteroid) | The next asteroid: Cuttlefish (asteroid) to shift |
This article is taken from the Japanese Wikipedia Salome (asteroid)
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