2013 ND15

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2013 ND15
Discovery
Perihelion
0.28100 AU (42.037 Gm)
0.72351 AU (108.236 Gm)
Eccentricity0.61162
0.62 yr (224.8 d)
198.82°
1.6015°/day
Inclination4.7962°
95.841°
19.697°
Earth MOID0.00751978 AU (1,124,943 km)
Jupiter MOID3.95146 AU (591.130 Gm)
Physical characteristics
Dimensions40–100 m[a][5]
24.1[2]

2013 ND15 (also written 2013 ND15) is an asteroid that is a temporary trojan of Venus, the first known Venus trojan.[6]

Discovery, orbit and physical properties

2013 ND15 was discovered on 13 July 2013 by N. Primak, A. Schultz, T. Goggia and K. Chambers, observing for the Pan-STARRS project. As of September 2014, it has been observed 21 times with a data-arc span of 26 days. It is an Aten asteroid and its semi-major axis (0.7235 AU) is very similar to that of Venus but it has high eccentricity (0.6115) and small orbital inclination (4.794°). With an absolute magnitude of 24.1, it has a diameter in the range 40–100 m (for an assumed albedo range of 0.04-0.20).

Trojan dynamical state and orbital evolution

Animation of 2013 ND15 relative to Sun and Venus
  Sun ·   Venus ·    2013 ND15

2013 ND15 has been identified as a Venus trojan following a

Zoozve, and 2012 XE133.[6]

Potentially hazardous asteroid

2013 ND15 is not included in the

PHAs
) because its absolute magnitude is greater than 22.0, even though it comes to within 0.05 AU of Earth periodically. It approached Earth at 0.077 AU on 21 June 2016.

See also

Notes

  • ^ This is assuming an albedo of 0.20–0.04.

References

  1. ^ List Of Aten Minor Planets
  2. ^ a b c "2013 ND15". JPL Small-Body Database. Jet Propulsion Laboratory. SPK-ID: 3645042. Retrieved 3 April 2016.
  3. ^ AstDys-2 on 2013 ND15 Retrieved 2014-01-21
  4. ^ NEODyS-2 on 2013 ND15 Retrieved 2014-01-21
  5. ^ Absolute-magnitude conversion table (H)
  6. ^ .
Further reading

External links