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- 2002_AA29 apoapsis "1.513930451484E8".
- 2002_AA29 averageSpeed "29.784".
- 2002_AA29 orbitalPeriod "365.222".
- 2002_AA29 periapsis "1.478026962516E8".
- 2002_AA29 temperature "279.0".
- 2002_AA29 absoluteMagnitude "24.08".
- 2002_AA29 abstract "2002 AA29 (also written 2002 AA29) is a small near-Earth asteroid that was discovered on January 9, 2002 by the LINEAR (Lincoln Near Earth Asteroid Research) automatic sky survey. The diameter of the asteroid is only about 50 to 110 metres (160 to 360 feet). It revolves about the Sun on an almost circular orbit very similar to that of the Earth. This lies for the most part inside the Earth's orbit, which it crosses near the asteroid's furthest point from the Sun, the aphelion. Because of this orbit, the asteroid is classified as Aten type, named after the asteroid (2062) Aten.A further characteristic is that its mean orbital period about the Sun is exactly one sidereal year. This means that it is locked into a relationship with the Earth, since such an orbit is only stable under particular conditions. As yet only a few asteroids of this sort are known, locked into a 1:1 resonance with the Earth. The first was (3753) Cruithne, discovered in 1986.Asteroids that have a 1:1 orbital resonance with a planet are also called co-orbital objects, because they follow the orbit of the planet. The most numerous known co-orbital asteroids are the so-called trojans, which occupy the L4 and L5 Lagrangian points of the relevant planet. However, 2002 AA29 does not belong to these. Instead, it follows a so-called horseshoe orbit along the path of the Earth.".
- 2002_AA29 albedo "0.1".
- 2002_AA29 apoapsis "1.513930451484E11".
- 2002_AA29 averageSpeed "107222.4".
- 2002_AA29 discovered "2002-01-09".
- 2002_AA29 discoverer Lincoln_Near-Earth_Asteroid_Research.
- 2002_AA29 epoch "November 22, 2002 (JD 2452600.5)".
- 2002_AA29 escapeVelocity "0.0".
- 2002_AA29 formerName "none".
- 2002_AA29 orbitalPeriod "3.1555180799999997E7".
- 2002_AA29 periapsis "1.478026962516E11".
- 2002_AA29 temperature "279.0".
- 2002_AA29 thumbnail 2002AA29.gif?width=300.
- 2002_AA29 wikiPageExternalLink astorb.html.
- 2002_AA29 wikiPageExternalLink 2002M%26PS...37.1435C.
- 2002_AA29 wikiPageExternalLink K03A17.html.
- 2002_AA29 wikiPageExternalLink K02A29A.htm.
- 2002_AA29 wikiPageExternalLink AA29.html.
- 2002_AA29 wikiPageExternalLink 06v24n1.pdf.
- 2002_AA29 wikiPageID "603532".
- 2002_AA29 wikiPageRevisionID "539056344".
- 2002_AA29 absMagnitude "24.08".
- 2002_AA29 albedo "0.1".
- 2002_AA29 altNames "none".
- 2002_AA29 aphelion "1.012".
- 2002_AA29 argPeri "91.594".
- 2002_AA29 ascNode "106.849".
- 2002_AA29 avgSpeed "29.784".
- 2002_AA29 bgcolour "#FFFFC0".
- 2002_AA29 density "2".
- 2002_AA29 dimensions "~0.06 km".
- 2002_AA29 discovered "2002-01-09".
- 2002_AA29 discoverer Lincoln_Near-Earth_Asteroid_Research.
- 2002_AA29 discovery "yes".
- 2002_AA29 eccentricity "0.012".
- 2002_AA29 epoch "2002-11-22".
- 2002_AA29 escapeVelocity "~0.000 032 km/s".
- 2002_AA29 hasPhotoCollection 2002_AA29.
- 2002_AA29 inclination "10.739".
- 2002_AA29 mass "~2.3×108 kg".
- 2002_AA29 meanAnomaly "225.947".
- 2002_AA29 mpCategory Aten_asteroid.
- 2002_AA29 perihelion "0.988".
- 2002_AA29 period "3.1555180799999997E7".
- 2002_AA29 physicalCharacteristics "yes".
- 2002_AA29 semimajor "1.0".
- 2002_AA29 singleTemperature "~279 K".
- 2002_AA29 surfaceGrav "~0.000 017 m/s²".
- 2002_AA29 subject Category:Astronomical_objects_discovered_in_2002.
- 2002_AA29 subject Category:Aten_asteroids.
- 2002_AA29 subject Category:Co-orbital_minor_planets.
- 2002_AA29 subject Category:Earth-crosser_asteroids.
- 2002_AA29 type CelestialBody.
- 2002_AA29 type Planet.
- 2002_AA29 type Planet.
- 2002_AA29 type PhysicalBody.
- 2002_AA29 comment "2002 AA29 (also written 2002 AA29) is a small near-Earth asteroid that was discovered on January 9, 2002 by the LINEAR (Lincoln Near Earth Asteroid Research) automatic sky survey. The diameter of the asteroid is only about 50 to 110 metres (160 to 360 feet). It revolves about the Sun on an almost circular orbit very similar to that of the Earth. This lies for the most part inside the Earth's orbit, which it crosses near the asteroid's furthest point from the Sun, the aphelion.".
- 2002_AA29 label "2002 AA29".
- 2002_AA29 label "2002 AA29".
- 2002_AA29 label "2002 AA29".
- 2002_AA29 label "2002 AA29".
- 2002_AA29 label "2002 AA29".
- 2002_AA29 label "2002 AA29".
- 2002_AA29 label "2002 AA29".
- 2002_AA29 label "2002 AA29".
- 2002_AA29 label "2002 إيه إيه 29".
- 2002_AA29 sameAs 2002_AA29_(planetka).
- 2002_AA29 sameAs 2002_AA29.
- 2002_AA29 sameAs 2002_AA29.
- 2002_AA29 sameAs 2002_AA29.
- 2002_AA29 sameAs 2002_AA29.
- 2002_AA29 sameAs 2002_AA29.
- 2002_AA29 sameAs 2002_AA29.
- 2002_AA29 sameAs 2002_AA29.
- 2002_AA29 sameAs 2002_AA29.
- 2002_AA29 sameAs m.02vllg.
- 2002_AA29 sameAs Q211313.
- 2002_AA29 sameAs Q211313.
- 2002_AA29 wasDerivedFrom 2002_AA29?oldid=539056344.
- 2002_AA29 depiction 2002AA29.gif.
- 2002_AA29 isPrimaryTopicOf 2002_AA29.