2060 Chiron
Encyclopedia : 2 : 20 : 206 : 2060 Chiron
| Orbital elements | |
|---|---|
| Eccentricity (orbit)>e | |
| Inclination>i | ° |
| Perihelion>q |
|
| Argument of perihelion>ω | ° |
| Semi-major axis>a | AU |
| Longitude of the ascending node>ω | ° |
| Aphelion>Q |
|
| Mean anomaly>M | ° |
| Orbital period>P | years |
| Mean motion>n | °/day |
| Time of perihelion passage>TP | |
Although it was initially classified as an asteroid, later dispute arose as to whether it was an asteroid or actually a comet. Today it is classified as both, and accordingly it is also known by the cometary designation 95P/Chiron.
Chiron is named after Chiron of Greek legend. It should not be confused with the largest moon of Pluto named Charon, discovered in 1978.
Orbit
Chiron's orbit was found to be highly eccentric, with perihelion just inside the orbit of Saturn and aphelion just outside the orbit of Uranus. It attracted considerable interest because it was the first object discovered in such an orbit, well outside the asteroid belt. Chiron is now classified as a Centaur, the first of a class of objects orbiting between the outer planets. Centaurs are not in stable orbits and will eventually be removed by gravitational perturbation by the giant planets, moving to different orbits or leaving the solar system altogether.It has been calculated that in 1664 BC Chiron approached Saturn to within approximately 16 million kilometres; only 3 million km further away than Saturn's largest outer moon Phoebe, and within the orbital radii of many of Saturn's newly discovered minor satellites. Chiron is probably a refugee from the Kuiper belt.
Physical Characteristics
In 1988 it was found that Chiron was undergoing an outburst in brightness (by about one magnitude), which is behaviour typical of comets but not asteroids. Further observations in 1989 showed that Chiron had developed a cometary coma. At the time of its discovery, Chiron was close to aphelion, whereas the observations showing a coma were done closer to perihelion, perhaps explaining why no cometary behavior had been seen earlier.Chiron is officially designated as both a comet and an asteroid, an indication of the sometimes fuzzy dividing line between the two classes of object.
Since the discovery of Chiron, quite a few other Centaurs have been discovered, and nearly all are currently classified as asteroids but are being observed for possible cometary behavior. As of March 2006, only one has been observed to have a cometary coma: 60558 Echeclus, which now also has the cometary designation 174P/Echeclus.
There are also three other non-Centaur asteroids that are also classified as comets: 4015 Wilson-Harrington, 7968 Elst-Pizarro, and 118401 LINEAR.
Astrology
Chiron's discovery was publicized enough in the popular press that a school of astrology emerged assigning it a great importance.References
- PMID 10688775. [Preprint on arXiv.]
- [Preprint on arXiv.]
- Patrick Moore Guinness book of Astronomy ISBN 0851123759
External links
- [Orbit visualisation]. (Requires Java)
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