Samiksha Jaiswal (Editor)

(434326) 2004 JG6

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Discovery date
  
11 May 2004

Observation arc
  
4035 days (11.05 yr)

Inclination
  
18.946°

Mean anomaly
  
227.457°

Asteroid group
  
Apohele asteroid

Alternative names
  
none

Discovered
  
11 May 2004

Argument of perihelion
  
352.98°

Discoverer
  
Brian A. Skiff

(434326) 2004 JG6 vietsciencesfreefrtimhieukhoahocastronomieim

Discovered by
  
Brian A. Skiff / LONEOS

Minor planet category
  
Aten, ApoheleMercury-crosserVenus-crosser

Aphelion
  
0.97260 AU (145.499 Gm)

Similar
  
163693 Atira, Solar System, 2062 Aten, (33342) 1998 WT24, 2100 Ra‑Shalom

(434326) 2004 JG6 (also written 2004 JG6) is one of the closest orbiting objects to the Sun.

It is the second known Apohele asteroid (the first being 163693 Atira), which means its entire orbit lies within that of the Earth. Its orbital period is less than that of Venus, making it one of the closest known objects to the Sun, after Mercury. 2004 JG6 has an eccentric orbit that crosses the orbits of both Mercury and Venus.

It was discovered by Brian A. Skiff of the LONEOS project.

References

(434326) 2004 JG6 Wikipedia


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