Oddball asteroid.While scanning the sky for near-Earth asteroids asteroid /as·ter·oid/ (as´ter-oid) star-shaped. last month, an astronomer made a rare find. On May 10, Brian Skiff of the Lowell Observatory in Flagstaff, Ariz., spied a space rock that takes only 6 months to go around the sun, the shortest orbital period of any known asteroid. With observatory colleagues, Skiff describes the find in a May 14 circular of the Minor Planet minor planet: see asteroid. Center in Cambridge, Mass. The team estimates that the rock, designated 2004 JG, has a diameter between 500 meters and 1 kilometer. Residing between the orbits of Venus and Mercury on an elongated path, 2004 JG6 is only the second known asteroid with an orbit entirely within Earth's, notes Ted Bowell, who collaborated with Skiff. Most asteroids lie between the orbits of Jupiter and Mars, and calculations by William Bottke of the Southwest Research Institute in Boulder, Colo., suggest that only 2 percent of near-Earth asteroids come as close to Earth as 2004 JG does. The asteroid was found during the Lowell Observatory Lowell Observatory, astronomical observatory located in Flagstaff, Ariz.; it was founded in 1894 by Percival Lowell, the American astronomer who popularized the idea that Mars might support intelligent life. Its original telescope, still in operation, is a 24-in. (61-cm) refractor; also located at the Mars Hill site are the 13-in. (33-cm) A. Lawrence Lowell photographic camera used by Clyde Tombaugh when he discovered Pluto, and a 16-in. Near-Earth-Object Search, which uses a small robotic telescope to survey large areas of the sky. Over the next few weeks, 2004 JG6 will move through the constellations Cancer and Canis Minor Canis Minor [Lat.,=lesser dog], small constellation ying near the celestial equator, E of Orion and NE of Canis Major, the Large Dog. Known as the Small Dog, Canis Minor is traditionally identified as one of Orion's hunting dogs. It contains the bright star Procyon. The constellation reaches its highest point in the evening sky in late February. low in the western sky at dusk.--R.C. |
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