[meteorite-list] There IS an Earth Trojan Asteroid (probably)!
From: Sterling K. Webb <kelly_at_meteoritecentral.com>
Date: Fri Jun 24 20:28:43 2005 Message-ID: <42BCA518.51687C1D_at_bhil.com> Hi, In 1980, there was a search down to magnitude 14 that turned up nothing at the Earth's Trojan points. But there ARE Earth Trojans, or at least candidate objects. It takes a long series of observations to verify a true Trojan orbit, and they're doing that. In a search that is ongoing (slowly, one gathers) and that will scan 9 square degrees down to magnitude 22, there are good candidate objects. They "slew" the telescope at the Earth Trojan rate, stars are sstreak, regular asteroids are also streaks, but a Trojan is pretty much a dot or oval. photos of Earth Trojan candidates: <http://www.astro.uwo.ca/~wiegert/etrojans/etrojans.html> 3753 Cruithne and several other asteroids share the Earth's orbit but are not Trojans, but complicated "horseshoes": <http://www.astro.uwo.ca/~wiegert/3753/3753.html> There's no such thing as Googling enough... Sterling K. Webb --------------------------------------- "Matson, Robert" wrote: > Hi Darren, Sterling and List, > > Sterling pondered about Earth Trojans: > > > Makes me wonder if somebody has ever tracked the orbital points > 60 > degrees ahead and behind the Earth... Wouldn't it be great > to have > Trojans of our own? > > Certainly astronomers have tried, but small objects at L4 and L5 would > be hard to see due to a combination of range (150 million km), poorer > phase angle, and a maximum sky elevation of perhaps 45 degrees at > astronomical twilight -- lower when the sky is darker. It would be an > interesting exercise to compute the maximum size an Earth Trojan could > be and still have managed to go undetected. > > --Rob > ___ Received on Fri 24 Jun 2005 08:28:08 PM PDT |
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