Difference between revisions of "25143 Itokawa"

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'''25143 Itokawa''' is a Near-Earth object discovered in 1998 by [[w:Lincoln Near-Earth Asteroid Research|LINEAR]] project and named for the Japanese rocket engineer [[w:Hideo Itokawa|Hideo Itokawa]].
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'''25143 Itokawa''' is a Near-Earth object discovered in 1998 by [[w:Lincoln Near-Earth Asteroid Research|LINEAR]] project and named for the Japanese rocket engineer [[w:Hideo Itokawa|Hideo Itokawa]]. It was visited by the [[w:Hayabusa|Hayabusa]] spacecraft in September 2005.
  
 
==Itokawa in Orbiter==
 
==Itokawa in Orbiter==

Latest revision as of 13:27, 9 November 2024

25143 Itokawa
25143Itokawa-Asteroid3Dzip-Orbiter2016D3D9.jpg
25143 Itokawa in Orbiter
Designation
Name 25143 Itokawa
Reference body Sun
Number of satellites 0
Planetary mean orbits
Epoch 2005.7453798768
Semimajor axis (a) 198046136569.879 km
(1.32385665420968 AU)
Eccentricity (e) 0.280122478810222
Inclination (i) 0.0283138805752587 radian
(1.62226585859977°)
Longitude of the ascending node (LAN, ☊) 1.20592765142946 radian
69.0945648250315°
Longitude of periapsis (ϖ) 4.04659634268755 radian
231.852891829071°
Mean longitude (L) 9.67227318273871 radian
554.180431668496°
Rotational Elements
Sidereal Rotation Period 43675.2 seconds
(12.132 hours)
Sidereal Rotation Offset 0
Obliquity 0.1 radians
Selected physical parameters
Mean radius 45000 m
Mass 9.5×1010 kg
Equatorial gravity 0.000000003 m/s2
Escape velocity 1.678×10-5 m/s
Gravity at surface Itokawa 0%
Sun 100%
Note *Elements given are from Itokawa.cfg (Asteroid 3D.zip)

25143 Itokawa is a Near-Earth object discovered in 1998 by LINEAR project and named for the Japanese rocket engineer Hideo Itokawa. It was visited by the Hayabusa spacecraft in September 2005.

Itokawa in Orbiter[edit]

Itokawa is a Near-Earth object released by T1234 in the add-on 3D Asteroids in November 2014. Modeled as a 45 km body in an eccentric orbit of .28 with a Semimajor axis of about 1.3 AU, it is considerably larger than the actual Itokawa which is about 330 meters average diameter.

The hard landing surface is very much below the visual surface, anywhere from about 30 km to 100 km below. It is modeled at a elongated object with a rough surface.

See also[edit]

25143 Itokawa at Wikipedia

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