1615 Bardwell

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1615 Bardwell
Discovery [1]
Discovered by Indiana Asteroid Program
Discovery site Goethe Link Obs.
Discovery date 28 January 1950
Designations
MPC designation 1615 Bardwell
Named after
Conrad M. Bardwell
(astronomer)[2]
1950 BW · 1926 TO
1937 TJ · 1948 RB1
1948 RH1 · 1948 TG
main-belt · Themis[3]
Orbital characteristics[1]
Epoch 31 July 2016 (JD 2457600.5)
Uncertainty parameter 0
Observation arc 89.55 yr (32708 days)
Aphelion 3.6822 AU (550.85 Gm)
Perihelion 2.5686 AU (384.26 Gm)
3.1254 AU (467.55 Gm)
Eccentricity 0.17816
5.53 yr (2018.1 d)
99.560°
Inclination 1.6890°
152.54°
252.18°
Earth MOID 1.57686 AU (235.895 Gm)
Jupiter MOID 1.72107 AU (257.468 Gm)
Physical characteristics
Dimensions 27.78 km[4]
31.579±0.250 km[5]
25.01±1.49 km[6]
31±3 km[7]
Mean radius
13.89 ± 0.8 km
18 h (0.75 d)[lower-alpha 1][1]
0.0642[4]
0.0497±0.0192[5]
0.079±0.015[6]
0.05±0.01[7]
0.0642 ± 0.008[1]
B–V = 0.692
U–B = 0.329
Tholen = B
B[3]
11.38

1615 Bardwell, provisional designation 1950 BW, is a rare-type bluish asteroid from the outer region of the asteroid belt, that measures about 30 kilometers in diameter. It was discovered by the Indiana Asteroid Program at the U.S. Goethe Link Observatory near Brooklyn, Indiana at on 28 January 1950.[8]

The dark asteroid is a member of the Themis family, a dynamical family of outer-belt asteroids with nearly coplanar ecliptical orbits. It orbits the Sun at a distance of 2.6–3.7 AU once every five and a half years (2,014 days). Its orbit shows an eccentricity of 0.18 and is tilted by 2 degrees to the plane of the ecliptic. It has a rotation period of 18 hours[lower-alpha 1] and an albedo between 0.05 and 0.08, based on data from the IRAS, WISE and NEOWISE surveys.[4][5][6][7]

It is a B-type asteroid under the Tholen classification taxonomy, a rare subtype of the abundant carbonaceous C-types found in the outer belt. The spectra of B-type bodies show a broad absorption feature at one mircon wavelength that is associated with the presence of magnetite and is what gives the asteroid its blue tint.[9] There are only a few dozens asteroids known to display such a B-spectrum.[10]

The Themistian asteroids was named after Conrad M. Bardwell (1926–2010), a research associate at the Cincinnati Observatory and later associate director of the Minor Planet Center in Cambridge, Massachusetts, United States. Bardwell successfully established numerous identifications from observations in widely separated oppositions and provided observers with reliable data of orbital elements.[2]

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 Tedesco (1979): rotation period of 18 hours with a brightness amplitude of 0.2. Summary figures at Asteroid Lightcurve Database for (1615) Bardwell
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External links


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