Skip Page Navigation
NASA JPL Caltech
NASA Logo - Jet Propulsion Laboratory + View the NASA Portal
+ Near-Earth Object (NEO) Project
Search JPL
JPL Home Earth Solar System Stars & Galaxies Technology
JPL Solar System Dynamics
BODIES ORBITS EPHEMERIDES TOOLS PHYSICAL DATA DISCOVERY FAQ SITE MAP
JPL Small-Body Database Browser
Search: [ help ]  
16035 Sasandford (1999 FX32)
Classification: Main-belt Asteroid          SPK-ID: 2016035
Ephemeris | Orbit Diagram | Orbital Elements | Physical Parameters | Discovery Circumstances ]

[ hide orbit diagram ]
Orbit Diagram
Note: Make sure you have Java enabled on your browser to see the applet. This applet is provided as a 3D orbit visualization tool. The applet was implemented using 2-body methods, and hence should not be used for determining accurate long-term trajectories (over several years or decades) or planetary encounter circumstances. For accurate long-term ephemerides, please instead use our Horizons system.
Orbit Viewer

Additional Notes: the orbits shown in the applet are color coded. The planets are white lines, and the asteroid/comet is a blue line. The bright white line indicates the portion of the orbit that is above the ecliptic plane, and the darker portion is below the ecliptic plane. Likewise for the asteroid/comet orbit, the light blue indicates the portion above the ecliptic plane, and the dark blue the portion below the ecliptic plane.

Orbit Viewer applet originally written and kindly provided by Osamu Ajiki (AstroArts), and further modified by Ron Baalke (JPL).


Orbital Elements at Epoch 2454800.5 (2008-Nov-30.0) TDB
Reference: MPO77297 (heliocentric ecliptic J2000)
 Element Value Uncertainty (1-sigma)   Units 
e 0.0905830 n/a  
a 2.7847020 n/a AU
q 2.5324553 n/a AU
i 9.54437 n/a deg
node 128.77119 n/a deg
peri 166.38926 n/a deg
M 305.74694 n/a deg
tp 2455056.2927665
(2009-Aug-12.79276650)
n/a JED
period 1697.3309141
4.65
n/a
n/a
d
yr
n 0.21209771 n/a deg/d
Q 3.0369487 n/a AU
  Orbit Determination Parameters
   # obs. used (total)      410  
   first obs. used      1986-??-??  
   last obs. used      2005-05-18  
   # oppositions      10  
   planetary ephem.      DE403  
   quality code      0  
   fit RMS      0.66  
   data source      MPC:mpn  
   producer      MPC  

Additional Information
 T_jup = 3.305 

Ephemeris | Orbit Diagram | Orbital Elements | Physical Parameters | Discovery Circumstances ]

Physical Parameter Table
Parameter Symbol Value Units Sigma Reference Notes
absolute magnitude H 12.50 mag n/a IRAS-A-FPA-3-RDR-IMPS-V6.0 IRAS observations used: 2
diameter diameter 23.18 km 2.2 IRAS-A-FPA-3-RDR-IMPS-V6.0 IRAS observations used: 2
geometric albedo albedo 0.0329   0.007 IRAS-A-FPA-3-RDR-IMPS-V6.0 IRAS observations used: 2

16035 Sasandford           Discovered 1999 Mar. 24 by the Lowell Observatory Near-Earth Object Search at the Anderson Mesa Station.
Astronomer and meteoriticist Scott Alan Sandford (b. 1957), a researcher at NASA's Ames Research Center, studies the connections between interstellar chemistry and the materials, particularly organics, found in meteorites. The name was suggested by D. P. Cruikshank.
NOTE: some special characters may not display properly (any characters within {} are an attempt to place the proper accent above a character)
Reference: 20040928/MPCPages.arcLast Updated: 2004-09-28

Alternate Designations
 1999 FX32 = 1986 PM5 
Ephemeris | Orbit Diagram | Orbital Elements | Physical Parameters | Discovery Circumstances ]
ABOUT SSD CREDITS/AWARDS PRIVACY/COPYRIGHT GLOSSARY LINKS
FirstGov 2008-Sep-20 08:09 UT
(server date/time)  
NASA Home Page
Site Manager:   Donald K. Yeomans
Webmaster  Alan B. Chamberlin