(9007) James Bond is the asteroid of the main belt , which was discovered on October 5, 1983 by the Czech astronomer Antonin Mrkos at the Klet Observatory , Czechoslovakia [1] .
| (9007) James Bond | |
|---|---|
| Asteroid | |
| Opening | |
| Discoverer | A. Mrkos |
| Place of discovery | Stand |
| Discovery date | October 5, 1983 |
| Eponym | James Bond |
| Alternative notation | 1983 TE 1 ; 1979 SD 12 |
| Category | Main ring |
| Orbital characteristics | |
| Age of August 27, 2011 JD 2455800.5 | |
| Eccentricity ( e ) | 0.15258 |
| Semimajor axis ( a ) | 369.93 million km (2.47283 AU ) |
| Perihelion ( q ) | 313.486 million km (2.09553 AU) |
| Aphelion ( Q ) | 426.374 million km (2.85013 AU) |
| Circulation Period ( P ) | 1,420,332 days (3,889 g. ) |
| Average orbital speed | 18.83 km / s |
| Inclination ( i ) | 5,860 ° |
| Longitude node (Ω) | 210.087 ° |
| Perihelion Argument (ω) | 174.320 ° |
| Median Anomaly ( M ) | 56.636 ° |
| physical characteristics | |
| Diameter | 4 - 10 km |
| Apparent magnitude | 19.16 m (current) |
| Absolute magnitude | 13.9 m |
| Current distance from the sun | 2,463 a. e. |
| Current distance from earth | 3.283 a. e. |
Orbit of the asteroid James Bond and his position in the solar system
The asteroid got its name in honor of the fictional English spy James Bond , a character in adventure novels and short stories by the British writer Jan Fleming , their adaptations, which appeared between 1953 and 1964, as well as works by other authors [2] . Asteroid number - 9 007 - a reference to the designation 007 , the Bond code number in the British Secret Service [1] .
See also
- List of Asteroids ( 9001–9100 )
- Classifications of Minor Planets
Notes
- ↑ 1 2 Whitehouse, David . The name's Bond, James Bond , BBC News (April 14, 1999). Date of treatment July 15, 2011.
- ↑ Schmadel, Lutz D. Dictionary of Minor Planet Names . - Fifth Revised and Enlarged Edition. - B. , Heidelberg, N. Y .: Springer, 2003 .-- P. 675. - ISBN 3-540-00238-3 .