Minor planet
A minor planet is an astronomical object in direct orbit around the Sun that is neither a planet nor exclusively classified as a comet. Before 2006 the International Astronomical Union officially used the term minor planet, but during that year's meeting it reclassified minor planets and comets into dwarf planets and small Solar System bodies.
Minor planets can be dwarf planets, asteroids, trojans, centaurs, Kuiper belt objects, and other trans-Neptunian objects. As of 2019, the orbits of 794,832 minor planets were archived at the Minor Planet Center, 541,128 of which had received permanent numbers ).
The first minor planet to be discovered was Ceres in 1801. The term minor planet has been used since the 19th century to describe these objects. The term planetoid has also been used, especially for larger objects such as those the International Astronomical Union has called dwarf planets since 2006. Historically, the terms asteroid, minor planet, and planetoid have been more or less synonymous. This terminology has become more complicated by the discovery of numerous minor planets beyond the orbit of Jupiter, especially trans-Neptunian objects that are generally not considered asteroids. A minor planet seen releasing gas may be dually classified as a comet.
Objects are called dwarf planets if their own gravity is sufficient to achieve hydrostatic equilibrium and form an ellipsoidal shape. All other minor planets and comets are called small Solar System bodies. The IAU stated that the term minor planet may still be used, but the term small Solar System body will be preferred. However, for purposes of numbering and naming, the traditional distinction between minor planet and comet is still used.
Populations
Hundreds of thousands of minor planets have been discovered within the Solar System and thousands more are discovered each month. The Minor Planet Center has documented over 213 million observations and 794,832 minor planets, of which 541,128 have orbits known well enough to be assigned permanent official numbers. Of these, 21,922 have official names., the lowest-numbered unnamed minor planet is, and the highest-numbered named minor planet is 543315 Asmakhammari.There are various broad minor-planet populations:
- Asteroids; traditionally, most have been bodies in the inner Solar System.
- * Near-Earth asteroids, those whose orbits take them inside the orbit of Mars. Further subclassification of these, based on orbital distance, is used:
- ** Apohele asteroids orbit inside of Earth's perihelion distance and thus are contained entirely within the orbit of Earth.
- ** Aten asteroids, those that have semi-major axes of less than Earth's and aphelion greater than 0.983 AU.
- ** Apollo asteroids are those asteroids with a semimajor axis greater than Earth's, while having a perihelion distance of 1.017 AU or less. Like Aten asteroids, Apollo asteroids are Earth-crossers.
- ** Amor asteroids are those near-Earth asteroids that approach the orbit of Earth from beyond, but do not cross it. Amor asteroids are further subdivided into four subgroups, depending on where their semimajor axis falls between Earth's orbit and the asteroid belt;
- * Earth trojans, asteroids sharing Earth's orbit and gravitationally locked to it. As of 2011, the only one known is 2010 TK7.
- * Mars trojans, asteroids sharing Mars's orbit and gravitationally locked to it. As of 2007, eight such asteroids are known.
- * Asteroid belt, whose members follow roughly circular orbits between Mars and Jupiter. These are the original and best-known group of asteroids.
- * Jupiter trojans, asteroids sharing Jupiter's orbit and gravitationally locked to it. Numerically they are estimated to equal the main-belt asteroids.
- Distant minor planets; an umbrella term for minor planets in the outer Solar System.
- * Centaurs, bodies in the outer Solar System between Jupiter and Neptune. They have unstable orbits due to the gravitational influence of the giant planets, and therefore must have come from elsewhere, probably outside Neptune.
- * Neptune trojans, bodies sharing Neptune's orbit and gravitationally locked to it. Although only a handful are known, there is evidence that Neptune trojans are more numerous than either the asteroids in the asteroid belt or the Jupiter trojans.
- * Trans-Neptunian objects, bodies at or beyond the orbit of Neptune, the outermost planet.
- ** The Kuiper belt, objects inside an apparent population drop-off approximately 55 AU from the Sun.
- *** Classical Kuiper belt objects like Makemake, also known as cubewanos, are in primordial, relatively circular orbits that are not in resonance with Neptune.
- *** Resonant Kuiper belt objects
- **** Plutinos, bodies like that are in a 2:3 resonance with Neptune.
- ** Scattered disc objects like Eris, with aphelia outside the Kuiper belt. These are thought to have been scattered by Neptune.
- *** Resonant scattered disc objects.
- ** Detached objects such as Sedna, with both aphelia and perihelia outside the Kuiper belt.
- *** Sednoids, detached objects with perihelia greater than 75 AU.
- ** The Oort cloud, a hypothetical population thought to be the source of long-period comets that may extend to 50,000 AU from the Sun.
Naming conventions
- – provisional designation upon discovery on 24 April 1932
- – formal designation, receives an official number
- 1862 Apollo – named Minor planet, receives a name, the alphanumeric code is dropped
Provisional designation
Minor planets that have been given a number but not a name keep their provisional designation, e.g. 1950 DA. Because modern discovery techniques are finding vast numbers of new asteroids, they are increasingly being left unnamed. The earliest discovered to be left unnamed was for a long time 1981 VA, now 3360 Syrinx; as of September 2008, this distinction is held by. On rare occasions, a small object's provisional designation may become used as a name in itself: the then unnamed gave its "name" to a group of objects that became known as classical Kuiper belt objects before it was finally named 15760 Albion in January 2018.
A few objects are cross-listed as both comets and asteroids, such as 4015 Wilson–Harrington, which is also listed as 107P/Wilson–Harrington.
Numbering
Minor planets are awarded an official number once their orbits are confirmed. With the increasing rapidity of discovery, these are now six-figure numbers. The switch from five figures to six figures arrived with the publication of the Minor Planet Circular of October 19, 2005, which saw the highest numbered minor planet jump from 99947 to 118161.Naming
The first few asteroids were named after figures from Greek and Roman mythology but as such names started to dwindle the names of famous people, literary characters, discoverer's spouses, children, colleagues, and even television characters were used.Gender
Eccentric
Discoverer's name
Languages
Physical properties of comets and minor planets
Commission 15 of the International Astronomical Union is dedicated to the Physical Study of Comets & Minor Planets.Archival data on the physical properties of comets and minor planets are found in the PDS Asteroid/Dust Archive. This includes standard asteroid physical characteristics such as the properties of binary systems, occultation timings and diameters, masses, densities, rotation periods, surface temperatures, albedoes, spin vectors, taxonomy, and absolute magnitudes and slopes. In addition, European Asteroid Research Node, an association of asteroid research groups, maintains a Data Base of Physical and Dynamical Properties of Near Earth Asteroids.
Most detailed information is available from :Category: Minor planets visited by spacecraft and :Category: Comets visited by spacecraft.