4769 Castalia

From OrbiterWiki
Revision as of 02:47, 13 September 2024 by Arvil (talk | contribs) (Added content.)
Jump to navigation Jump to search
4769 Castalia
Castalia-AsteroidPackv1zip-Orbiter2003P2.jpg
4769 Castalia from AsteroidPack_v1.00.zip in Orbiter 2003P2
Designation
Name 4769 Castalia
Reference body Sun
Number of satellites 0
Planetary mean orbits
Epoch 2006
Semimajor axis (a) 159050773004.883
Eccentricity (e) 0.483237084250589
Inclination (i) 8.886656997° (0.155101424092898 radian)
Longitude of the ascending node (LAN, ☊) 325.6764383° (5.68412614431682 radian)
Longitude of periapsis (ϖ) 446.9604267° (7.80093107166837 radian)
Mean longitude (L) 720.1806637 (12.5695237899611 radian)
Rotational Elements
Sidereal Rotation Period 14400
Sidereal Rotation Offset 0
Obliquity 0
Selected physical parameters
Mean radius 1800 m
Mass 5×1011 kg
Mean surface gravity 0588 m/s2
Orbital speed at surface 0.136 m/s
Escape velocity 0.19256 m/s
Note *Elements given are from 4769 Castalia.cfg (AsteroidPack_v1.00.zip)

4769 Castalia is a near-Earth object of the Apollo group of asteroids. It was discovered by Eleanor Helin at Palomar Observatory on 9 August 1969, and on 28 August 1989, Castalia was observed by radar at Arecibo Observatory, the first asteroid modeled by radar. Castalia was made available in Orbiter by Nighthawke's AsteroidPack v1.00 zip file.

Physical Characteristics in Orbiter

In Orbiter Castalia appears to be a contact binary, has a mean diameter of about 1800 meters and a mass of 5×1011 kg. Surface Gravity is about 0.00001 m/s2, and escape velocity is about 0.2 m/s. Landing on Castalia near the waist the spacecraft will land on the radius above the texture surface, but, near the ends, it will land below the texture surface.

Orbital characteristics in Orbiter

The orbit of Castalia varies from inside the orbit of Venus to just outside that of Mars, Semimajor axis is about 159 million Km at an eccentricity 0.483, inclination is of Orbital period is about 400 days.

Note to pilots

The visual surface is well below the hard landing surface, a ship cannot land on the terrain. The docking and landing lights are reflected by the terrain.

Orbiter versions and add-ons which include Bacchus
Add-on Source Version Author Type Release Date Compatibility Wiki article
Asteroid Pack 1.00 O-F Resources 2004-11-21 Nighthawke Scenery 21 November 2004

Gallery