Rahul Sharma (Editor)

46 Hestia

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Discovered by
  
Norman Robert Pogson

Minor planet category
  
main belt

Semi-major axis
  
2.526 AU (377.811 Gm)

Discovered
  
16 August 1857

Orbits
  
Sun

Discoverer
  
N. R. Pogson

Discovery date
  
August 16, 1857

Aphelion
  
2.961 AU (442.886 Gm)

Eccentricity
  
0.172

Perihelion
  
312.809418 billion m

Spectral type
  
C-type asteroid

Named after
  
Hestia

Similar
  
N R Pogson discoveries, Other celestial objects

46 Hestia /ˈhɛstiə/ is a large, dark main-belt asteroid. It is also the primary body of the Hestia clump, a group of asteroids with similar orbits.

Hestia was discovered by N. R. Pogson on August 16, 1857, at the Radcliffe Observatory, Oxford. Pogson awarded the honour of naming it to William Henry Smyth, the previous owner of the telescope used for the discovery. Smyth chose to name it after Hestia, Greek goddess of the hearth. This created a problem in Greek, where 4 Vesta also goes by the name Hestia.

The computed Lyapunov time for this asteroid is 30,000 years, indicating that it occupies a chaotic orbit that will change randomly over time because of gravitational perturbations of the planets.

Hestia has been studied by radar. 13-cm radar observations of this asteroid from the Arecibo Observatory between 1980 and 1985 were used to produce a diameter estimate of 131 km. In 1988 a search for satellites or dust orbiting this asteroid was performed using the UH88 telescope at the Mauna Kea Observatories, but the effort came up empty.

Properties

Photometric observations made in 2012 at the Organ Mesa Observatory in Las Cruces, New Mexico produced a light curve with a period of 21.040 ± 0.001 hours. There are two brightness minima, having luminosity variations of 0.05 and 0.12 in magnitude, respectively.

In 2000, Michalak estimated Hestia to have a mass of 3.5×1018 kg.

Even though Hestia is only about 124 km in diameter, in 1997, Bange and Bec-Borsenberger estimated Hestia as having a mass of 2.1×1019 kg, based on a perturbation by 19 Fortuna. This older 1997 estimate would give it a density of 14+ g/cm³ and make Hestia more massive than several much larger asteroids.

References

46 Hestia Wikipedia