525 Adelaide
Appearance
Discovery | |
---|---|
Synodic rotation period | 19.967 h (0.8320 d) |
12.53 | |
Adelaide (
Main Belt. It was discovered 21 October 1908 by Joel Hastings Metcalf
.
Previously, the object A904 EB, discovered 14 March 1904 by Max Wolf, had been named 525 Adelaide but was subsequently lost. When it was rediscovered 3 October 1930 by Sylvain Arend as 1930 TA, it was named 1171 Rusthawelia. Some 28 years passed before the two objects were realized to be the same. 1930 TA retained the name Rusthawelia (and discovery credited to Arend); the name 525 Adelaide was reused for the object 1908 EKa.
Another confusion occurred in 1929, one year before Arend's discovery, when American astronomer Anne Sewell Young thought to have found long-lost "Adelide", when in fact she mistook the asteroid for comet 31P/Schwassmann–Wachmann that had a very similar orbital eccentricity.[2]
References
- ^ "525 Adelaide (1908 EKa)". JPL Small-Body Database. NASA/Jet Propulsion Laboratory. Retrieved 6 May 2016.
External links
- 525 Adelaide at AstDyS-2, Asteroids—Dynamic Site
- 525 Adelaide at the JPL Small-Body Database