4179 Toutatis

The asteroid 4179 Toutatis (too-ta'-tis) is an Apollo, an Alinda and a Mars-crosser asteroid with a chaotic orbit produced by a 3:1 resonance with the planet Jupiter. Due to its very low orbital inclination (0.47°) and its orbital period of very nearly 4 years, Toutatis makes frequent close approaches to Earth, with a minimum distance at present of just 0.006 AU (2.3 times as far as the Moon). The approach on September 29, 2004 was particularly close, at 0.0104 AU (within 4 lunar distances) from Earth, presenting a good opportunity for observation. The next approach after that will be November 9, 2008 at 0.0503 AU. Its rotation combines two separate periodic motions into a non-periodic result; to someone on the surface of Toutatis the Sun would seem to rise and set in apparently random locations and at random times at the asteroid's horizon. It was discovered on January 4, 1989 by Christian Pollas and was named after the Celtic deity Toutatis, a Gallic war god. Radar imagery has shown that Toutatis is a highly irregular body consisting of two distinct "lobes", with maximum widths of about 4.6 km and 2.4 km respectively. It is hypothesized that Toutatis formed from two originally separate bodies which coalesced at some point, with the resultant asteroid being compared to a "rubble pile".

Just how close is that?

To put the September 29, 2004 approach in perspective, imagine the asteroid and the Earth as two race cars, on two racetracks that represent their two orbits. The asteroid's track is about the length of the Indianapolis Motor Speedway, but wider: 1.5 km long and 1.2 km wide. Earth's track would be a circle 600 m (650 yards) in diameter located inside the asteroid's track, intersecting it near one end. At this scale, when the two speeding cars reach the intersection, they would pass within 3.2 m (10.2 ft, or two-thirds of a car-length) of each other, and could theoretically pass within 1.8 m (6 ft) of each other. The analogy breaks down, however, when one notes that the real "tracks" (representing the orbits) are not fixed in space and could be perturbed in the future.

Related topics

External links


... | Previous asteroid | '4179 Toutatis' | Next asteroid | ...
Toutatis Toutatis

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
monreale
ponzi scheme
lipari
tindari
tallangatta, victoria
gnu m4
issei japanese american
nisei japanese american
sansei japanese american
weimar
4 vesta
karl koch
orphe aux enfers
la belle hlne
taste
hagbard celine
fuckup
52 europa
vesta (mythology)
1 ceres
4769 castalia
964
europa (mythology)
965
mars (god)
3753 cruithne
io (mythology)
lares
253 mathilde
16 psyche
psyche (band)
amalthea (moon)
amalthea (mythology)
self explanatory
richensa of lotharingia
effect of taxes and subsidies on price
2 pallas
243 ida
asteroid belt
deadweight loss
unicos
navajo
four corners monument
sponge