1537 Transylvania
| Discovery | |
|---|---|
| Discovered by | Gyula Strommer | 
| Discovery site | Budapest | 
| Discovery date | 27 August 1940 | 
| Designations | |
| MPC designation | 1537 | 
| Named after | Transylvania | 
| 1940 QA | |
| Orbital characteristics[1] | |
| Epoch 31 July 2016 (JD 2457600.5) | |
| Uncertainty parameter 0 | |
| Observation arc | 112.44 yr (41068 days) | 
| Aphelion | 3.9667225 AU (593.41324 Gm) | 
| Perihelion | 2.1314205 AU (318.85597 Gm) | 
| 3.049071 AU (456.1345 Gm) | |
| Eccentricity | 0.3009608 | 
| 5.32 yr (1944.7 d) | |
| 70.062131° | |
| 0° 11m 6.431s / day | |
| Inclination | 3.857786° | 
| 230.12903° | |
| 148.00187° | |
| Earth MOID | 1.13351 AU (169.571 Gm) | 
| Jupiter MOID | 1.51221 AU (226.223 Gm) | 
| Jupiter Tisserand parameter | 3.163 | 
| Physical characteristics | |
| Mean radius | 6.885±0.75 km | 
| 12 h (0.50 d) | |
| 0.1619±0.041 | |
| 12.4 | |
|  | |
1537 Transylvania (1940 QA) is a main-belt asteroid discovered on August 27, 1940, by Gyula Strommer at Budapest.
It was a lost asteroid until Leif Kahl Kristensen at Aarhus University rediscovered it along with 452 Hamiltonia along with numerous other small objects in 1981[2]
References
- ↑ "1537 Transylvania (1940 QA)". JPL Small-Body Database. NASA/Jet Propulsion Laboratory. Retrieved 27 April 2016.
- ↑ Kristensen, L. K.; Gibson, J.; Shao, C.-Y.; Bowell, E.; Marsden, B. G. (April 1981), Marsden, B. G., ed., "(1537) Transylvania and (452) Hamiltonia", IAU Circ., 3595, 1 1981, Bibcode:1981IAUC.3595....1K
External links
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