2008 FF5

2008 FF5
Discovery[1]
Discovered by Mt. Lemmon Survey (G96)
1.5-m reflector
Discovery date 2008-03-28
Designations
Mercury crosser,
Venus crosser,
Apollo Asteroid,
Earth crosser,
Mars crosser
Orbital characteristics[2]
Epoch 31 March 2008 (JD 2454556.5)
Uncertainty parameter 9
Aphelion 4.49421629 AU (672.325187 Gm)
Perihelion 0.079138425 AU (11.8389399 Gm)
2.28667736 AU (342.082064 Gm)
Eccentricity 0.96539152
3.46 yr (1263.0 d)
12.042691°
 17m 6.123s /day
Inclination 2.6285675°
15.296731°
19.899259°
Earth MOID 0.00725225 AU (1,084,921 km)
Jupiter MOID 0.964477 AU (144.2837 Gm)
Physical characteristics
Dimensions 70–160 m [3]
23.1

    2008 FF5 is the asteroid with the second-smallest known perihelion of any known object orbiting the Sun. Its extreme orbital eccentricity brings it within 0.079 AU of the Sun (26% of Mercury's perihelion) and as far as 4.487 AU from the Sun (well beyond the orbit of Mars).

    References

    1. "MPEC 2008-F50 : 2008 FF5". IAU Minor Planet Center. 2008-03-29. Retrieved 2014-03-05. (K08F05F)
    2. "JPL Small-Body Database Browser: (2008 FF5)" (2008-04-08 last obs (arc=11 days)). Jet Propulsion Laboratory. Retrieved 30 March 2016.
    3. "NEODyS 2008 FF5". Near Earth Objects - Dynamic Site. Retrieved 2014-03-07.

    External links


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