Neha Patil (Editor)

118401 LINEAR

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Discovered by
  
LINEAR

Alternative names
  
1999 RE70

Aphelion
  
3.8110 AU (570.12 Gm)

Discovered
  
7 September 1999

Asteroid family
  
Themis family

Discovery date
  
7 September 1999

Observation arc
  
5808 days (15.90 yr)

Orbital period
  
2,087 days

Inclination
  
0.23477°

Asteroid group
  
Asteroid belt

Minor planet category
  
Main-belt (Themis) Main-belt comet

Named after
  
Lincoln Near-Earth Asteroid Research

Discoverer
  
Lincoln Near-Earth Asteroid Research

118401 LINEAR (provisional designation 1999 RE70) is an asteroid and main-belt comet (176P/LINEAR) that was discovered by the Lincoln Near-Earth Asteroid Research (LINEAR) 1-metre telescopes in Socorro, New Mexico on September 7, 1999. (118401) LINEAR was discovered to be cometary on November 26, 2005, by Henry H. Hsieh and David C. Jewitt as part of the Hawaii Trails project using the Gemini North 8-m telescope on Mauna Kea and was confirmed by the University of Hawaii's 2.2-m (88-in) telescope on December 24–27, 2005, and Gemini on December 29, 2005. Observations using the Spitzer Space Telescope have resulted in an estimate of 4.0±0.4 km for the diameter of (118401) LINEAR.

The main-belt comets are unique in that they have flat (within the plane of the planets' orbits), approximately circular (small eccentricity), asteroid-like orbits, and not the elongated, often tilted orbits characteristic of all other comets. Because (118401) LINEAR can generate a coma (produced by vapour boiled off the comet), it must be an icy asteroid. When a typical comet approaches the Sun, its ice heats up and sublimates (changes directly from ice to gas), venting gas and dust into space, creating a tail and giving the object a fuzzy appearance. Far from the Sun, sublimation stops, and the remaining ice stays frozen until the comet's next pass close to the Sun. In contrast, objects in the asteroid belt have essentially circular orbits and are expected to be mostly baked dry of ice by their confinement to the inner Solar System (see extinct comet).

It is suggested that these main-belt asteroid-comets are evidence of a recent impact exposing an icy interior to solar radiation. A good question is, "How long will current main-belt comets keep generating a coma?" It is estimated short-period comets remain active for about 10,000 years before having most of their ice sublimated away and going dormant.

Four other objects are classified as both periodic comets and numbered asteroids: 2060 Chiron (95P/Chiron), 4015 Wilson–Harrington (107P/Wilson–Harrington), 7968 Elst–Pizarro (133P/Elst–Pizarro), and 60558 Echeclus (174P/Echeclus). As a dual-status object, astrometric observations of 118401 LINEAR should be reported under the minor planet designation.

118401 LINEAR will come to perihelion on 2017 March 12.

References

118401 LINEAR Wikipedia