reply to post by L.HAMILTON
Orcus (minor planet 90482)
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Orbits of Orcus (red), Pluto (green), and other planets compared
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One of the largest known Kuiper Belt objects (KBO). It was initially and provisionally known as 2004 DW. The name Orcus, from a Roman god of the dead
and another name for the Greek deity Hades, was approved by the International Astromical Union (IAU) on Nov. 22, 2004. It was chosen because Orcus
moves in an orbit similar to that of Pluto
Orcus was discovered in images taken on Feb. 17, 2004 (nearly 74 years to the day after Pluto was found) by Mike Brown (CalTech), Chad Trujillo
(Gemini Observatory), and David Rabinowitz (Yale) – the same team that discovered the largest known KBO, Eris (formerly called 2003 UB313). The
diameter of Orcus has been put at about 1,600 km (compared with Pluto's 2,300 km) but this is only an estimate because of uncertainty in the
object's albedo (relectivity). Orcus moves in an orbit similar to that of Pluto, i.e. it completes three orbits of the Sun for every two of Neptune
goes around the sun. It is therefore classified as a plutino. Under new guidelines being considered by astronomers for what constitutes a planet,
Orcus may be elevated to the status of a dwarf planet if it turns out that its shape is approximately spherical.
Discovery images of Orcus.
Credit: Vrown, Rabinowitz, and Trujillo
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Diameter 840-1,880 km
Density 2.0? g/cm3
Albedo 0.09?
Absolute magnitude 2.3
Surface temp. ~45 K
Eccentricity 0.226
Semi-major axis 39.42 AU
Perihelion 30.53 AU
Aphelion 48.31 AU
Orbital period 247.49 years
Inclination 20.55°