[meteorite-list] Ceres: A Texas-Sized Space Rock

From: Ron Baalke <baalke_at_meteoritecentral.com>
Date: Thu Apr 22 09:55:43 2004
Message-ID: <200201071918.LAA24371_at_zagami.jpl.nasa.gov>

http://www.jpl.nasa.gov/solar_system/features/ceres.html

A Texas-Sized Space Rock
Jet Propulsion Laboratory
January 7, 2002

For two centuries it was the largest known rock in the solar system. The
Texas-sized asteroid Ceres, about 930 kilometers (580 miles) across, was the
first asteroid ever detected. The space rock was identified in 1801 by
astronomer Giuseppe Piazzi, a monk in Sicily and the founding director of
the Palermo Astronomical Observatory. He noted over a few nights a shifting
point in the sky that wasn't one of the planets, their moons or a star.
Thus, he discovered the rock.

After discovering the asteroid, Piazzi was invited to join the Celestial
Police, a group of 24 international astronomers looking for what they called
"guest planets" between Mars and Jupiter. The Celestial Police noted that
the spacing between planets was fairly regular, but that there was a large
gap between Mars and Jupiter.

Soon other small bodies were discovered in that region (Pallas in 1802, Juno
in 1804 and Vesta in 1807), so the Celestial Police concluded that not just
one, but many minor planets had to exist in a main asteroid belt. The
asteroid belt probably represents primitive pieces of the solar system that
never managed to accumulate into a genuine planet.

German mathematician Karl Friedrich Gauss calculated from Piazzi's few
observations that Ceres circled around the Sun once every 4.6 years or about
4 years, 220 days.

The asteroid has a very primitive surface, say scientists on NASA's Dawn
mission, which will launch in 2006 and examine Ceres in 2014. The asteroid,
like a young planet, contains water-bearing minerals, and possibly a very
weak atmosphere and frost. Infrared observations show that the surface is
warm.

NASA's Hubble Space Telescope observed last year that Ceres' surface has a
large spot, which could be a crater formed when another asteroid struck
Ceres. A second explanation may be that the spot is a darker substance in
the asteroid's soil.

Recently, Ceres lost its claim to the title of biggest rock in the solar
system. In July 2001, a larger object was found in the vast Kuiper belt of
asteroids, stretching from 30 to 100 AU (2.8 to 9.3 billion miles away from
the Sun.) This brightest and therefore biggest non-planet space rock, 2001
KX76, could be anywhere from 960 to 1270 kilometers (600 to 790 miles)
across.

Right now, Ceres is less than three degrees away from the Sun, making it
hard to see. In October, the asteroid will be bright enough to see with a
little help from binoculars.
Received on Mon 07 Jan 2002 02:18:53 PM PST


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