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8 Flora

8 Flora 8 Flora Astronomical Symbol.svg
8Flora (Lightcurve Inversion).png
A three-dimensional model of 8 Flora based on its light curve.
Discovery
Discovered by J.R. Hind
Discovery date October 18, 1847
Designations
Pronunciation /ˈflɔərə/
Named after
Flōra
none
Main belt (Flora family)
Adjectives Florian
Orbital characteristics
Epoch November 26, 2005 (JD 2453700.5)
Aphelion 380.850 Gm (2.546 AU)
Perihelion 277.995 Gm (1.858 AU)
329.422 Gm (2.202 AU)
Eccentricity 0.1561
1193.549 d (3.27 a)
Average orbital speed
19.95 km/s
156.401°
Inclination 5.886°
111.011°
285.128°
Proper orbital elements
2.2014283 AU
Proper eccentricity
0.1448717
Proper inclination
5.5736218°
Proper mean motion
110.205216 deg / yr
3.26663 yr
(1193.138 d)
Precession of perihelion
32.016655 arcsec / yr
Precession of the ascending node
−35.510731 arcsec / yr
Physical characteristics
Dimensions 136×136×113 km
128 km (mean)
145×145×120 km
Mass 8.47×1018 kg
4.3×1018 kg
Mean density
3.13±1.43 g/cm³
~3.3 g/cm³
~0.045 m/s²
~0.081 km/s
0.533 d (12.799 h)
Albedo 0.243 (geometric)
Temperature ~180 K
max: 276 K (+3 °C)
Spectral type
S-type asteroid
7.9 to 11.6
6.49
0.21" to 0.053"

8 Flora is a large, bright main-belt asteroid. It is the innermost large asteroid: no asteroid closer to the Sun has a diameter above 25 kilometres or two-elevenths that of Flora itself, and not until the tiny 149 Medusa was discovered was a single asteroid orbiting at a closer mean distance known. It is the seventh-brightest asteroid with a mean opposition magnitude of +8.7. Flora can reach a magnitude of +7.9 at a favorable opposition near perihelion, such as occurred in November 2007. Flora may be the residual core of an intensely heated, thermally evolved, and magmatically differentiated planetesimal which was subsequently disrupted.

Flora was discovered by J. R. Hind on October 18, 1847. It was his second asteroid discovery after 7 Iris.

The name Flora was proposed by John Herschel, from Flora, the Latin goddess of flowers and gardens, wife of Zephyrus (the personification of the West wind), and mother of Spring. The Greek equivalent is Chloris, who has her own asteroid, 410 Chloris, but in Greek Flora is also called Chloris (8 Χλωρίς).

Lightcurve analysis indicates that Flora's pole points towards ecliptic coordinates (β, λ) = (16°, 160°) with a 10° uncertainty. This gives an axial tilt of 78°, plus or minus ten degrees.

Flora is the parent body of the Flora family of asteroids, and by far the largest member, comprising about 80% of the total mass of this family. Nevertheless, Flora was almost certainly disrupted by the impact(s) that formed the family, and is probably a gravitational aggregate of most of the pieces.


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