677 Aaltje Explained

Minorplanet:yes
Background:
  1. D6D6D6
677 Aaltje
Mpc Name:(677) Aaltje
Alt Names:1909 FR
Discovered:18 January 1909
Epoch:31 July 2016 (JD 2457600.5)
Eccentricity:0.051565
Semimajor:2.9568AU
Perihelion:2.8043AU
Aphelion:3.1092abbr=onNaNabbr=on
Period:5.08 yr (1857.1 d)
Inclination:8.4812°
Asc Node:272.799°
Arg Peri:276.733°
Rotation:16.608abbr=onNaNabbr=on
Abs Magnitude:9.6
Mean Motion: / day
Observation Arc:109.68 yr (40062 d)
Uncertainty:0

677 Aaltje is a main-belt minor planet orbiting the Sun, discovered by August Kopff at Heidelberg on January 18, 1909. It was named after the Dutch singer Aaltje Noordewier-Reddingius.

This object has a geometric albedo of 0.2794. Photometric observations during 2008 showed a rotation period of 16.6076 ± 0.0006 hours and a brightness variation of 0.30 ± 0.02 in magnitude.

677 Aaltje is orbiting within the 7/3 Kirkwood gap. This means it has a 7:3 orbital resonance with Jupiter, completing seven orbits for every three orbits of the planet. For smaller objects, this would typically lead to orbital instability, causing it to shift to a different orbital period. However, 677 Aaltje is too large for its orbit to have been moved by more than about 0.01 AU over the lifetime of the Solar System. What is more likely is that orbital interactions with the dwarf planet Ceres may have shifted it to the present-day orbit - the orbit of 677 Aaltje leads it into relatively close encounters with Ceres.

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