5 Astraea

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5 Astraea (Template:IPAc-en) is an asteroid in the asteroid belt. This object is orbiting the Sun at a distance of Script error: No such module "convert". with a period of Template:Cvt and an orbital eccentricity of 0.19. The orbital plane is inclined at an angle of 5.37° to the plane of the ecliptic. It is spinning with a period of 16.8 h. The surface of Astraea is highly reflective and its composition is probably a mixture of nickeliron with silicates of magnesium and iron. It is an S-type asteroid in the Tholen classification system.[1]

Discovery and name

Astraea was the fifth asteroid discovered, on 8 December 1845, by Karl Ludwig Hencke and named for Astraea, a Greek goddess of justice named after the stars. It was his first of two asteroid discoveries. The second was 6 Hebe. A German amateur astronomer and post office headmaster, Hencke was looking for 4 Vesta when he stumbled on Astraea. The King of Prussia awarded him an annual pension of 1200 marks for the discovery.[2]

Hencke's symbol for Astraea is an inverted anchor, encoded in Unicode 17.0 as U+1F778 🝸 (File:Astraea symbol (fixed width).svg),[3][4] though given Astraea's role with justice and precision, it is perhaps a stylized set of scales, or a typographic substitute for one.[5][6] This symbol is no longer used. The astrological symbol is a percent sign, encoded specifically at U+2BD9 ⯙:[7] it is simply shift-5 on the keyboard, because Astraea was the fifth asteroid discovered.[3] The modern astronomical symbol is a simple encircled 5 (⑤).

For 38 years after the discovery of the fourth known asteroid, Vesta, in 1807, no further asteroids were discovered.[8] After the discovery of Astraea, 8 more were discovered in the following 5 years, and 24 were found in the 5 years after that. The discovery of Astraea proved to be the starting point for the eventual reclassification of the four original asteroids (which were identified as planets at the time)[8], as it became apparent that these were only the largest of a new type of celestial body with thousands of members.

Characteristics

Photometry indicates prograde rotation, that the north pole points in the direction of right ascension 115° or 310° and declination 55°, with a 5° uncertainty.[9] This gives an axial tilt of about 33°.Script error: No such module "Unsubst". With an apparent magnitude of 8.7 (on a favorable opposition on 15 February 2016), it is only the seventeenth-brightest main-belt asteroid, and fainter than, for example, 192 Nausikaa or even 324 Bamberga (at rare near-perihelion oppositions).

An stellar occultation on 6 June 2008 allowed Astraea's diameter to be estimated; it was found to be 115 ± 6 km.[10]

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See also

Notes


References

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External links

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