Minor planet

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Comparing IAU terms
Traditional From 2006
minor planet dwarf planet
SSSB
comet

Minor planet is a term used since the 19th century to describe objects, such as asteroids, that are in orbit around the Sun but are not planets or comets.[1] The term planetoid has also been used, especially for larger objects.[2] Historically, the terms asteroid, minor planet, and planetoid have been more or less synonymous,[3][2] but the issue has been complicated by the discovery of numerous minor planets beyond the orbit of Jupiter and especially Neptune that are not universally considered asteroids.[3]

Before 2006, the International Astronomical Union had officially used the term minor planet. During its 2006 meeting, it reclassified minor planets and comets into dwarf planets and small solar system bodies.[4] Objects were called dwarf planets if their self-gravity is sufficient to achieve hydrostatic equilibrium, that is, an ellipsoidal shape, with all minor planets and comets preferentially called "small solar system bodies".[4] The IAU states: "the term 'minor planet' may still be used, but generally the term 'small solar system body' will be preferred."[5]

The Saturnian moon Mimas is the smallest body known to be in hydrostatic equilibrium, while the asteroid Pallas may be the largest that is not. The IAU has so far officially classified five minor planets as dwarf planets. In order both of discovery and distance from the Sun, they are Ceres, Pluto, Haumea, Makemake, and Eris.

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[edit] Populations of minor planets

Hundreds of thousands of minor planets have been discovered within the Solar System, with the rate of discovery currently running at around 5,000 per month. Of the more than 400,000 registered minor planets, 192,280 have orbits known well enough to be assigned permanent official numbers.[6][7] Of these, 14,698 have official names.[8] As of September 18, 2008, the lowest-numbered, unnamed minor planet is (3708) 1974 FV1;[9] the highest-numbered named minor planet is 188847 Rhipeus.[10]

These fall into several broad populations:

  • Asteroids; traditionally, most have been bodies in the inner solar system.[3]
  • Main belt asteroids, those following roughly circular orbits between Mars and Jupiter. These are the original and best known group of asteroids or minor planets.
  • Near earth asteroids, those whose orbits take them inside the orbit of Mars. Further subclassification of these, based on orbital distance, is traditional.
  • Aten asteroids, those which have semi-major axes of less than one Earth orbit. Those Aten asteroids which have their aphelion within Earth's orbit are known as Apohele asteroids.
  • Amor asteroids are those near-Earth asteroids that approach the orbit of the Earth from beyond, but do not cross it. Amor asteroids are further subdivided into four subgroups, depending on where their semimajor axis falls between Earth's orbit and the main asteroid belt.
  • Apollo asteroids are those asteroids with a semimajor axis greater than that of the earth while having a perihelion distance of 1.017 AU or less. Like Aten asteroids, Apollo asteroids are Earth-crossers.
  • Jupiter Trojans, asteroids sharing Jupiter's orbit and gravitationally locked to it. Numerically they are estimated to equal the main-belt asteroids.
  • Centaurs, bodies in the outer solar system between Jupiter and Neptune. They have unstable orbits due to the influence of the giant planets' gravity, and therefore must have come from elsewhere, probably outside Neptune.
  • Trans-Neptunian objects, bodies at or beyond the orbit of Neptune, the outermost planet.
  • Neptune Trojans, bodies sharing Neptune's orbit and gravitationally locked to it. Although only a handful are known, they are though to outnumber main-belt asteroids by an order of magnitude.
  • The Kuiper belt, objects inside an apparent population drop-off approximately 55 AU from the Sun.

[edit] Naming

See also: Pronunciation of asteroid names and Centaur and TNO pronunciation

A newly discovered minor planet is given a provisional designation (such as 2002 AT4) consisting of the year of discovery and an alphanumeric code indicating the half-month of discovery and the sequence within that half-month. Once an asteroid's orbit has been confirmed, it is given a number, and later may also be given a name (e.g. 433 Eros). The formal naming convention uses parentheses around the number (e.g. (433) Eros), but dropping the parentheses is quite common. Informally, it is common to drop the number altogether, or to drop it after the first mention when a name is repeated in running text.

Minor planets that have been given a number but not a name keep their provisional designation, e.g. (29075) 1950 DA. As modern discovery techniques are finding vast numbers of new asteroids, they are increasingly being left unnamed. The first to be left unnamed was for a long time was (3360) 1981 VA, now 3360 Syrinx; as of September 2008, this distinction is held by (3708) 1974 FV1. On rare occasions, a small object's provisional designation may become used as a name in itself: the still unnamed (15760) 1992 QB1 gave its name to a group of Kuiper belt objects which became known as cubewanos.

[edit] Numbering

Minor planets are awarded with an official number once their orbits are confirmed. With the increasing rapidity of discovery, these are now six-figure numbers. The switch from five figures to six figures arrived with the publication of the Minor Planet Circular (MPC) of October 19, 2005, which saw the highest numbered minor planet jump from 99947 to 118161. This change caused a small Y2K-like crisis for various automated data services, since only five digits were allowed in most data formats for the number. Most services have now widened the number field. For those which did not, the problem has been addressed in some cases by having the leftmost digit (the ten-thousands place) use the alphabet as a digit extension. A=10, B=11,..., Z=35, a=36,..., z=61. A high number such as 120437 is thus cross-referenced as C0437 on some lists.

[edit] Sources for names

The first few asteroids were named after figures from Graeco-Roman mythology, but as such names started to dwindle the names of famous people, literary characters, discoverer's wives, children, and even television characters were used.

The first asteroid to be given a non-mythological name was 20 Massalia, named after the city of Marseilles. For some time only female (or feminized) names were used; Alexander von Humboldt was the first man to have an asteroid named after him, but his name was feminized to 54 Alexandra. This unspoken tradition lasted until 334 Chicago was named; even then, oddly feminised names show up in the list for years afterward.

As the number of asteroids began to run into the hundreds, and eventually the thousands, discoverers began to give them increasingly frivolous names. The first hints of this were 482 Petrina and 483 Seppina, named after the discoverer's pet dogs. However, there was little controversy about this until 1971, upon the naming of 2309 Mr. Spock (the name of the discoverer's cat). Although the IAU subsequently banned pet names as sources, eccentric asteroid names are still being proposed and accepted, such as 4321 Zero, 6042 Cheshirecat, 9007 James Bond, 13579 Allodd, 24680 Alleven, or 26858 Misterrogers.

[edit] Special naming rules

Minor planet naming is not always a free-for-all: there are some populations for which rules have developed about the sources of names. For instance, centaurs (orbiting between Saturn and Neptune) are all named after mythological centaurs; Jupiter trojans after heroes from the Trojan War; resonant trans-Neptunian objects after underworld spirits; and non-resonant TNOs after creation deities.

Another well-established rule is that, unlike comets, minor planets may not be named after their discoverer(s). One way to circumvent this rule has been for astronomers to exchange the courtesy of naming their discoveries after each other. A particular exception to this rule is 96747 Crespodasilva, which was named after its discoverer, Lucy d'Escoffier Crespo da Silva, because she died shortly after the discovery, at age 22.[11][12] A few objects are also cross-listed as both comets and asteroids, such as 4015 Wilson-Harrington and 107P/Wilson-Harrington.

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  1. ^ When did the asteroids become minor planets?, James L. Hilton, Astronomical Information Center, United States Naval Observatory. Accessed on line May 5, 2008.
  2. ^ a b Planet, asteroid, minor planet: A case study in astronomical nomenclature, David W. Hughes, Brian G. Marsden, Journal of Astronomical History and Heritage 10, #1 (2007), pp. 21–30. Bibcode2007JAHH...10...21H
  3. ^ a b c "Asteroid", MSN Encarta, Microsoft. Accessed on line May 5, 2008.
  4. ^ a b Press release, IAU 2006 General Assembly: Result of the IAU Resolution votes, International Astronomical Union, August 24, 2006. Accessed on line May 5, 2008.
  5. ^ Questions and Answers on Planets, additional information, news release IAU0603, IAU 2006 General Assembly: Result of the IAU Resolution votes, International Astronomical Union, August 24, 2006. Accessed on line May 8, 2008.
  6. ^ JPL. "How Many Solar System Bodies". JPL Solar System Dynamics. NASA. Retrieved on 2008-09-18.
  7. ^ "Minor Planet Statistics". Minor Planet Center. Retrieved on 2008-09-18.
  8. ^ "Minor Planet Names". Minor Planet Center. Retrieved on 2008-08-19.
  9. ^ "Discovery Circumstances: Numbered Minor Planets (1)-(5000)". Minor Planet Center. Retrieved on 2008-10-20.
  10. ^ "Discovery Circumstances: Numbered Minor Planets (185001)-(190000)". Minor Planet Center. Retrieved on 2008-10-20.
  11. ^ NASA JPL Small-Body Database Browser on 96747 Crespodasilva
  12. ^ Staff (November 28, 2000). "Lucy Crespo da Silva, 22, a senior, dies in fall", Hubble News Desk. Retrieved on 15 April 2008. 
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