Maria family explained

The Maria family (adj. Marian; FIN: 506; also known as the Roma family) is a collisional asteroid family located in the inner parts of the intermediate asteroid belt, near the 1:3 Kirkwood gap. The family consist of several thousand stony S-type asteroids. It is named after its parent body and lowest numbered member, the asteroid 170 Maria. It is also known as the Roma family, named after its alternative parent body, 472 Roma.

The family was initially identified by Japanese astronomer Kiyotsugu Hirayama in 1918. Asteroids in this family typically have a semi-major axis between 2.52−2.62 AU, and an inclination of 12 to 17°.[1]

Members

The family consists of 2940 known members based on the HCM method. Its largest members are the asteroids 170 Maria and 472 Roma. A complete synthetic HCM-listing for all members can be obtained by using the Ferret Interactive Search.

Name !! a !! e !! i
SBDB
2.553 0.065 14.40°
2.545 0.094 15.80°
Name !! a !! e !! i
SBDB
2.529 0.034 14.92°
2.554 0.127 15.77°
2.535 0.058 14.27°
2.539 0.129 14.84°
2.552 0.151 14.59°
2.531 0.155 13.68°
2.541 0.094 14.32°
2.564 0.112 14.85°
2.578 0.133 15.91°
2.533 0.156 15.39°
2.527 0.133 15.57°

Interlopers

Although asteroid 695 Bella has orbital properties that make it a candidate for this family, the spectral properties of the object indicate it is most likely an interloper. Instead, it may have been spalled off from 6 Hebe, or its parent body.

Notes and References

  1. http://www.easysky.de/eng/screenshots/index.htm EasySky – Screenshots