Minorplanet: | yes |
Background: |
|
139 Juewa | |
Discoverer: | James Craig Watson |
Discovered: | 10 October 1874 |
Mpc Name: | (139) Juewa |
Pronounced: | Mandarin: |
Alt Names: | A874 TA |
Mp Category: | Main belt |
Epoch: | 31 July 2016 (JD 2457600.5) |
Semimajor: | 2.78073AU |
Perihelion: | 2.29261AU |
Aphelion: | 3.26884abbr=onNaNabbr=on |
Eccentricity: | 0.17553 |
Period: | 4.64 yr (1693.7 d) |
Inclination: | 10.9127° |
Asc Node: | 1.83417° |
Arg Peri: | 165.566° |
Mean Anomaly: | 60.2817° |
Dimensions: | × |
Mean Diameter: | |
Mass: | (3.262 ± 0.778/0.933) kg |
Density: | 1.805 ± 0.430/0.516 g/cm |
Surface Grav: | 0.0438 m/s² |
Escape Velocity: | 0.0828 km/s |
Rotation: | 20.991abbr=onNaNabbr=on |
Spectral Type: | CP (Tholen) |
Abs Magnitude: | 8.06, 7.924 |
Albedo: | |
Single Temperature: | ~167 K |
Mean Motion: | / day |
Observation Arc: | 121.07 yr (44222 d) |
Uncertainty: | 0 |
139 Juewa is a very large and dark main belt asteroid. It is probably composed of primitive carbonaceous material. It was the first asteroid discovered from China.
Juewa was discovered from Beijing by the visiting American astronomer James Craig Watson on 10 October 1874; Watson was in China to observe the transit of Venus. Watson asked Prince Gong to name the asteroid. Gong's choice was 瑞華星 (roughly, "Star of China’s Fortune"). Watson used the first two characters ('star' being redundant), transliterating them Juewa in Wade–Giles convention of the time. (In pinyin, 瑞華 is transliterated ruìhuá.)[1]
S: | 瑞华星 |
L: | Auspicious star of Huaxia [China] |
P: | Ruìhuáxīng |
W: | jui4 hua2 hsing1 |
Since 1988 there have been 8 reported stellar occultations by Juewa. From the occultation on 31 August 2013 the best fit ellipse measures × .[2]
13-cm radar observations of this asteroid from the Arecibo Observatory between 1980 and 1985 were used to produce a diameter estimate of 172 km. Based upon radar data, the near surface solid density of the asteroid is .