158 Koronis Explained

Minorplanet:yes
Background:
  1. D6D6D6
158 Koronis
Discovered:4 January 1876
Mpc Name:(158) Koronis
Adjective:Koronidian [1]
Alt Names:A876 AA; 1893 PA;
1911 HB; 1955 HA1
Orbit Ref:[2]
Epoch:31 July 2016 (JD 2457600.5)
Semimajor:2.86858AU
Perihelion:2.71904AU
Aphelion:3.0181abbr=onNaNabbr=on
Eccentricity:0.052130
Period:4.86 yr (1774.6 d)
Inclination:1.0015°
Asc Node:277.96°
Avg Speed:17.80 km/s
Sidereal Day:14.218 h (0.592 d)
Abs Magnitude:9.27
Arg Peri:142.37°
Mean Motion: / day
Observation Arc:122.53 yr (44755 d)
Uncertainty:0
Rotation:14.218abbr=onNaNabbr=on
Moid:1.7299AU
Jupiter Moid:2.16233AU
Tisserand:3.297

158 Koronis is a main-belt asteroid that was discovered by Russian astronomer Viktor Knorre on January 4, 1876, from the Berlin observatory. It was the first of his four asteroid discoveries. The meaning of the asteroid name is uncertain, but it may come from Coronis the mother of Asclepius from Greek mythology. Alternatively, it may come from Coronis, a nymph of the Hyades sisterhood. The Koronis family is named after this asteroid.

From its spectrum this is classified as an S-type asteroid, indicating a stony composition. Photometric observations show a synodic rotation period of 14.206 ± 0.002 hours with a brightness variation of 0.28–0.43 in magnitude. A subsequent study at the Altimira Observatory during 2010 was in agreement with this estimate, yielding a rotation period of 14.208 ± 0.040 hours. Based on a model constructed from the lightcurve, the shape of Koronis resembles that of 243 Ida, an asteroid in the same family, although it is a bit larger. https://web.archive.org/web/20030419143817/http://www.astro.helsinki.fi/~kaselain/asteroids.html

A collision involving 158 Koronis 15 million years ago created a cluster of 246 objects. 158 Koronis itself retained 98.7% of the total mass. These new objects formed the Koronis(2) family. Koronis(2) is a subfamily of the much larger Koronis family.

Notes and References

  1. McClintock & Strong (1894) Cyclopaedia of Biblical, Theological, and Ecclesiastical Literature
  2. Web site: The Asteroid Orbital Elements Database . astorb . .