Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
16 Psyche (/ ˈ s aɪ k iː / SY-kee) is a large M-type asteroid, which was discovered by the Italian astronomer Annibale de Gasparis, on 17 March 1852 and named after the Greek goddess Psyche. [10] The prefix "16" signifies that it was the sixteenth minor planet in order of discovery.
Asteroid 16 Psyche is the heaviest known M-type asteroid, and may be an exposed iron core of a protoplanet, the remnant of a violent collision with another object that stripped off its mantle and crust. On January 4, 2017, the Psyche mission was selected for NASA's Discovery #14 mission. [9] [10]
English: 16 Psyche space elevator. This asteroid as a mean diameter of 223 km and has a Equatorial rotation velocity of 53.14 km/h or .0147 km/s, making a rotation in just over 4 hours. This asteroid as a mean diameter of 223 km and has a Equatorial rotation velocity of 53.14 km/h or .0147 km/s, making a rotation in just over 4 hours.
Scientists wonder whether this asteroid, named 16 Psyche, could be an exposed core of an early planet, once possibly as large as Mars, that lost its rocky outer layers after countless collisions ...
On January 4, NASA announced a future mission to explore a Massachusetts-sized asteroid known as 16 Psyche. The mission is seeking to learn more about the unusual body, which is thought to be the ...
Later this year, NASA is sending a spaceship to an asteroid called "16 Psyche." The sheer volume of metal on the asteroid is staggering—and incredibly valuable.
May 16, 1866: First asteroid known to have more than one moon (determined in 2005) 90 Antiope: 80×80: October 1, 1866: Double asteroid with two nearly equal components; its double nature was discovered using adaptive optics in 2000 92 Undina: 126: 1867 July 7: Created in one of the largest asteroid-on-asteroid collisions of the past 100 ...
216 Kleopatra, with a mean diameter of 122 km, is the third largest M-type asteroid known after 16 Psyche and 22 Kalliope. [19] Radar delay-Doppler imaging, high-resolution telescopic images, and several stellar occultations show it to be a contact binary asteroid with a shape commonly referred to as a "dog-bone" or "dumbbell."