Discovery | |
---|---|
Discovered by | C. H. F. Peters |
Discovery date | 12 August 1883 |
Designations | |
(234) Barbara | |
Named after | Saint Barbara? |
A883 PA, 1942 RL1 1953 RE,1975 XP | |
Main belt | |
Orbital characteristics[1] | |
Epoch 31 July 2016 (JD 2457600.5) | |
Uncertainty parameter 0 | |
Observation arc | 131.26 yr (47944 d) |
Aphelion | 2.97153 AU (444.535 Gm) |
Perihelion | 1.79939 AU (269.185 Gm) |
2.38546 AU (356.860 Gm) | |
Eccentricity | 0.24569 |
3.68 yr (1345.7 d) | |
Average orbital speed | 19.28 km/s |
16.9454° | |
0° 16m 3.05s / day | |
Inclination | 15.3746° |
144.553° | |
192.344° | |
Physical characteristics | |
Dimensions | 43.75±1.0 km[1] 45.62 ± 1.93 km[2] |
Mass | (0.44 ± 1.45) × 1018 kg[2] |
26.4744 h (1.10310 d) | |
0.2276±0.011 | |
S | |
9.02 | |
234 Barbara is a main belt asteroid that was discovered by German-American astronomer Christian Heinrich Friedrich Peters on August 12, 1883, in Clinton, New York. The object is orbiting the Sun with a semimajor axis of 2.385 AU, a period of 3.68 years, and an eccentricity of 0.25. The orbital plane is inclined by 15.37° to the plane of the ecliptic. It is classified as a stony S-type asteroid based upon its spectrum. The mean diameter of this object is estimated as 45.6 km.[2] It has a rotation rate of 26.5 hours, or a little over a day. It is possibly named for Saint Barbara, patron saint of mathematicians.[3][4]
Observations of light curves and stellar occultations suggest the surface exhibits large concave areas.[5] Polarimetric study of this asteroid reveals anomalous properties that suggests the regolith consists of a mixture of low and high albedo material. This may have been caused by fragmentation of an asteroid substrate with the spectral properties of CO3/CV3 carbonaceous chondrites.[6] It is the prototype for a class of asteroids called "Barbarians" that display a strong infrared absorption band at 2μm, which is a characteristic of an FeO–enriched spinel mineral. Multiple other examples of this class have since been discovered.[7]
Observations made in 2009 with ESO's Very Large Telescope Interferometer (VLTI) suggested that 234 Barbara may be a binary asteroid,[8] although a paper published in 2015 states that "the VLTI observations can be explained without the presence of a large satellite".[5]
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