420356 Praamzius Explained

Minorplanet:yes
420356 Praamzius
Background:
  1. C2E0FF
Discovery Ref: 
Discovered:23 January 2012
Mpc Name:(420356) Praamzius
Pronounced:
(in Lithuanian prɐˈâmʑʊs/)
Adjective:Praamzinian
Named After:Praámžius 
Mp Category:TNO cubewano 
cold distant 
Orbit Ref: 
Epoch:27 April 2019 (JD 2458600.5)
Uncertainty:3
Observation Arc:13.08 yr (4,778 d)
Perihelion:42.147 AU
Time Periastron:≈ 12 June 2158[1]
±3 months
Semimajor:42.587 AU
Eccentricity:0.0103
Period:277.93 yr (101,512 d)
Mean Motion: / day
Inclination:1.1001°
Asc Node:314.26°
Arg Peri:358.38°
Mean Diameter:
Albedo:
Magnitude:22.09
Abs Magnitude:5.7

420356 Praamzius (provisional designation ) is a trans-Neptunian object from the classical Kuiper belt, located in the outermost region of the Solar System, approximately NaNkm (-2,147,483,648miles) in diameter. It was discovered on 23 January 2012, by astronomers Kazimieras Černis and Richard Boyle with the Vatican's VATT at Mount Graham Observatory in Arizona, United States. The cold classical Kuiper belt object is a weak dwarf planet candidate and possibly very red in color. It was named after the chief god Praamžius from Lithuanian mythology.

Orbit and classification

Eccentricity at different Epochs! Epoch! Eccentricity! Refs
09 Dec 2014 0.0018
31 Jul 2016 0.0032
04 Apr 2019 0.0103
01 Sep 2021 0.013
Barycentric 0.0078

Praamzius orbits the Sun at a distance of 42.1–43.0 AU once every 277 years and 11 months (101,512 days; semi-major axis of 42.59 AU). Its orbit has an eccentricity of 0.01 and an inclination of 1° with respect to the ecliptic. It is a classical Kuiper belt object located in between the resonant plutino (39.4 AU) and twotino (47.8 AU) populations and has a low-eccentricity orbit. With an inclination significantly less than 4–7°, it belongs to the cold rather than to the "stirred" hot population.

With an eccentricity of 0.003 in 2016, Praamzius had one of the lowest eccentricities of any trans-Neptunian object, and a more circular orbit than any major planet (including Venus, the least eccentric planet at 0.007). But the object's eccentricity varies over time due to the position of the planets (also see table). A 10 million year simulation of the orbit shows the eccentricity (emax) does not get greater than 0.03.

Discovery

Initial discovery was from images acquired on 23 January 2012 at VATT, on Mount Graham, Arizona using a 1.8 meter reflecting telescope; precovery observations from VATT and the Sloan Digital Sky Survey dating back to 31 December 2002 have been accepted by the Minor Planet Center. The object has been repeatedly tracked through January 2016, mostly by VATT with some supporting observations by Las Campanas Observatory. Praamzius is one of the most recently discovered minor planets to receive a numeric designation, confirming it as a distinct body with a well determined orbit. This is due to the large number of observations since and indeed before its discovery: about one every 23 to 24 days on average from 2002 to 2016, and as many as one per 10 days in the period between discovery and assignment alone. Precovery images refined the orbit even more.

Naming

This minor planet was named after Praamžius ("the Eternal One", an epithet of Dievas), the Lithuanian god of the sky, peace, and friendship. The official was published by the Minor Planet Center on 22 February 2016 .

Physical characteristics

According to Johnston's archive, Praamzius measures 321 kilometers in diameter based on an assumed, generic albedo of 0.09. This would qualify the object as a weak dwarf planet candidate based on the 5-class taxonomic system of American astronomer Michael Brown. However, on his website, Brown estimates only a diameter of 191 kilometers due to a much higher (assumed) albedo of 0.20. As a consequence, he no longer considers Praamzius to be a possible dwarf planet.

As of 2018, neither the body's color indices, nor its rotational lightcurve has been obtained from photometric observations, and its rotation period, pole and shape remain unknown.

External links

Notes and References

  1. http://ssd.jpl.nasa.gov/horizons.cgi?find_body=1&body_group=sb&sstr=Praamzius JPL Horizons