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6 Hebe

6 Hebe 6 Hebe Astronomical Symbol.svg
6Hebe (Lightcurve Inversion).png
A three-dimensional model of 6 Hebe based on its light curve
Discovery
Discovered by Karl Ludwig Hencke
Discovery date July 1, 1847
Designations
Pronunciation /ˈhb/ HEE-bee
Named after
Hēbē
1947 JB
Main belt
Adjectives Hebean
Orbital characteristics
Epoch November 26, 2005 (JD 2453700.5)
Aphelion 2.914 AU (435.996 Gm)
Perihelion 1.937 AU (289.705 Gm)
2.426 AU (362.851 Gm)
Eccentricity 0.202
3.78 a (1379.756 d)
Average orbital speed
18.93 km/s
247.947°
Inclination 14.751°
138.752°
239.492°
Proper orbital elements
2.4252710 AU
Proper eccentricity
0.1584864
Proper inclination
14.3511092°
Proper mean motion
95.303184 deg / yr
3.77742 yr
(1379.702 d)
Precession of perihelion
31.568209 arcsec / yr
Precession of the ascending node
−41.829042 arcsec / yr
Physical characteristics
Dimensions 205×185×170 km
186 km (mean)
109 000 km2
Volume 3 380 000 km3
Mass 1.28×1019 kg
Mean density
3.81±0.26 g/cm³
~0.087 m/s2
~0.13 km/s
0.3031 d
Equatorial rotation velocity
22.4 m/s
Albedo 0.268 (geometric)
Temperature ~170 K
max: ~269 K (−4°C)
Spectral type
S-type asteroid
7.5 to 11.50
5.71
0.26" to 0.065"

6 Hebe (/ˈhb/ HEE-bee) is a large main-belt asteroid, containing around half a percent of the mass of the belt. However, due to its apparently high bulk density (greater than that of the Moon or even Mars), Hebe does not rank among the top twenty asteroids by volume. This high bulk density suggests an extremely solid body that has not been impacted by collisions, which is not typical of asteroids of its size – they tend to be loosely-bound rubble piles.

In brightness, Hebe is the fifth-brightest object in the asteroid belt after Vesta, Ceres, Iris, and Pallas. It has a mean opposition magnitude of +8.3, about equal to the mean brightness of Titan, and can reach +7.5 at an opposition near perihelion.

Hebe is probably the parent body of the H chondrite meteorites, which account for about 40% of all meteorites striking Earth.

Hebe was discovered on 1 July 1847 by Karl Ludwig Hencke, the sixth asteroid discovered. It was the second and final asteroid discovery by Hencke, after 5 Astraea. The name Hebe, goddess of youth, was proposed by Carl Friedrich Gauss.


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Wikipedia

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