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2 moons shed light on Sylvia’s asteroid

The Los Angeles Times
By The Los Angeles Times
2 Min Read Aug. 14, 2005 | 21 years Ago
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BERKELEY, Calif. -- One of the thousands of asteroids orbiting the sun turns out to be a mini-system all its own.

87 Sylvia -- a potato-shaped rock about 175 miles long in the asteroid belt between Mars and Jupiter -- is the first asteroid found with two moons in its orbit, according to research published in the current issue of the journal Nature.

The asteroid's larger moon, unofficially named Romulus, measures 11.3 miles across. It orbits 87 Sylvia at a distance of 860 miles, circling the asteroid every 88 hours. The smaller moon, dubbed Remus, has a diameter of 4.4 miles. It orbits 87 Sylvia at a distance of 450 miles, completing one circle every 33 hours.

The moons travel in the same plane with nearly circular orbits.

Astronomers have long surmised the existence of such "mini planetary systems" because when asteroids collide, they often fragment into rubble, which can be drawn by gravity to large objects.

Scientists have identified 60 asteroids with one moon.

Researchers identified Romulus four years ago using images from the Hubble Space Telescope and the Keck II telescope atop Mauna Kea in Hawaii.

Astronomers detected Remus through observations that began last fall using the 8-meter Yepun telescope in northern Chile.

Franck Marchis, a University of California, Berkeley, research astronomer who directed the study with colleagues at the Observatoire de Paris, said his team expects to find more multiple systems with two or more moons as spectroscopy becomes more sophisticated.

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