Petit-Prince (moon) explained

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Petit-Prince
Discovery Ref:[1]
Discoverer:W. J. Merline, L. M. Close,
C. Dumas, C. R. Chapman,
F. Roddier, F. Menard,
D. C. Slater, G. Duvert,
J. C. Shelton, T. Morgan
Discovered:1 November 1998
Pronounced:
in French pətipʁɛ̃s/
Mpc Name:S/1998 (45) 1
Named After:Napoléon, Prince Imperial and The Little Prince
Mp Category:Main belt
Orbit Ref:[2]
Semimajor:1184 ± 12 km
Eccentricity:0.0100 ± 0.0002
Period:4.766 ± 0.001 d
Avg Speed:18.1 m/s
Inclination:8.0 ± 0.1°
(with respect to Eugenia equator)
Satellite Of:45 Eugenia
Dimensions:~ 13 km (estimate) [3]
Mass:~ 1.2 kg (estimate) [4]
Escape Velocity:~ 5 m/s (estimate)
Abs Magnitude:13.6 [5]

(45) Eugenia I Petit-Prince is the larger, outer moon of asteroid 45 Eugenia. It was discovered in 1998 by astronomers at the Canada-France-Hawaii Telescope on Mauna Kea, Hawaii. Initially, it received the provisional designation S/1998 (45) 1. Petit-Prince was the first asteroid moon to be discovered with a ground-based telescope. Previously, the only known moon of an asteroid was Dactyl, discovered by the Galileo space probe, around 243 Ida.

Characteristics

Petit-Prince is 13 km in diameter, compared to 45 Eugenia's 214 km. It takes five days to complete an orbit around Eugenia.

Name

The discoverers chose the name in honour of Empress Eugénie's son, the Prince Imperial.[6] However, they also intended an allusion to the children's book The Little Prince by Antoine de Saint-Exupéry, which is about a prince who lives on an asteroid.[7]

In their submission of the name to the IAU, the discovers justified the double meaning by arguing for similarities between the Prince Imperial and the Little Prince:

"Both princes were young and adventurous, and had little fear of danger. Both were of rather small stature. They both left the confines of their cozy little worlds (asteroid B612 for the Little Prince and Chislehurst for the Prince Imperial). They both then undertook long journeys to end up in Africa, whereupon they both meet rather violent deaths ... And in both cases they lay alone for one night each after "death" and then "returned" back home..."

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. http://www.cbat.eps.harvard.edu/iauc/07100/07129.html IAUC 7129
  2. http://astro.berkeley.edu/~fmarchis/Science/Asteroids/Eugenia.html synthesis of several observations
  3. Assuming the same albedo as Eugenia, then using the difference in absolute magnitude
  4. Assuming same density and albedo as Eugenia
  5. W.J. Merline at al.. Discovery of a moon orbiting the asteroid 45 Eugenia. Nature. 401. 6753. 565–568. 1999. 1999Natur.401..565M. 10.1038/44089. 4414973 .
  6. Web site: Solar System Exploration: Asteroids – Moons . https://web.archive.org/web/20040803201121/http://solarsystem.nasa.gov/planets/profile.cfm?Object=Asteroids&Display=Moons . dead . 2004-08-03 . 2011 . National Aeronautics and Space Administration . 18 September 2011 .
  7. Web site: On a Permanent Name for Asteroid S/1998(45)1 . William J. Merlin . etal . 2000 . TXT . . 9 November 2011 .