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- From: bjacobs@chopin.udel.edu (William J Jacobs)
- Subject: Re: asteroids beyond Jupiter
- Message-ID: <BzuFB5.8nu@news.udel.edu>
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- Organization: University of Delaware
- References: <1ha9foINN8j8@uwm.edu> <1992Dec23.203536.6699@hpcvaac.cv.hp.com>
- Date: Sat, 26 Dec 1992 01:40:17 GMT
- Lines: 40
-
- In article <1992Dec23.203536.6699@hpcvaac.cv.hp.com> billn@hpcvaac.cv.hp.com (bill nelson) writes:
- >gwc@csd4.csd.uwm.edu (Greg F Walz Chojnacki) writes:
- >:
- >: Although it might seem like I'm paying out rope here, I'm curious about the
- >: usage of the terms "asteroid" and "planetoid." Bill, since yours is the first
- >: time I saw the distinction made, care to define these? (I hope it's more than
- >: asteroids being those things that lie where asteroids were first discovered.)
- >
- >Nope, that is the distinction I use. Whether it is currently the accepted
- >definition is another matter. I define an asteroid to be a body that
- >originated in the asteroid belt - others are planetoids or "minor bodies"
- >or comets etc.
- >
- >Flame away, if you wish. My asbestos underwear, while well charred, is still
- >functional.
- >
- >Bill
-
- Just for the record, before we drop this thread entirely, the Illustrated
- Encyclopedia of Astronomy and Space defines an asteroid as "A small rocky
- body moving in an elliptical orbit around the Sun; asteroids are also called
- minor planets" An asteroid that is currently orbiting within the asteroid
- belt is called a "belt asteroid", naturally enough, one that is orbiting in
- the orbit of Jupiter is called a "Trojan asteroid", "Apollo" and "Amor"
- asteroids are in elliptical orbits that have perihelion within the inner
- planets orbits (perihelion = closest aproach to the Sun). Planetoid is not
- an accepted term in Astronomy.
-
- A comet that got perturbed out of the Oort cloud and reperturbed into a near
- circular orbit could be rightfully called a minor planet, but wouldn't be
- called an asteroid because it's a chunk of ice not a rock. A pretty good
- example of this is Chiron (not to be confused with Charon).
-
- That clear? Good.
-
- Bill Jacobs
- who really doesn't know much more than you do on the subject, but happens to
- be sitting not 10 yards from an Astronomical library
-
-
-