Asteroid-Mathilde

This image mosaic of asteroid 253 Mathilde is constructed from four images acquired by the Near Earth Asteroid Rendezvous (NEAR) spacecraft on June 27, 1997.

253 Mathilde

Discovery

Nineteenth-century Austrian astronomer Johann Palisa, who found more than 100 asteroids during his career, discovered 253 Mathilde on November 12, 1885. V. A. Lebeuf, another Austrian astronomer, first calculated its orbit.

Overview

253 Mathilde is an asteroid in the main belt between Mars and Jupiter, where it orbits the Sun once every 4.3 years. It's about 52 kilometers across, and notable for its very slow rotation rate--it takes 17.4 days for the asteroid to turn on its axis.

Mathilde is a C-type asteroid, which means that it is made of rock rich in carbon, and is probably very little changed in the last 4.5 billion years, a time capsule from the time the planets first formed. All that carbon helps make Mathilde one of the darkest objects in the Solar System. It reflects only 4 percent of the light falling on it.

Despite its darkness, the asteroid couldn't avoid its moment in the spotlight on June 27, 1997. On that day the Near Earth Asteroid Rendezvous (NEAR) spacecraft streaked past at a velocity of 22,000 mph (9.93 kilometers per second), passing within 746 miles (1,200 kilometers) of the surface. Even at that high speed, during the 25-minute encounter NEAR managed to capture more than 500 spectacular images of the crater-pocked little world.

"Mathilde turned out to be more irregularly shaped than most of us expected," said Dr. Joseph Veverka of Cornell University, who lead the mission's imaging science team. "The degree to which the asteroid has been battered by collisions is astounding. At first glance there are more huge craters than there is asteroid." In fact, judging by its low density, Mathilde may be more of a loosely-packed pile of material than solid rock.

The NEAR mission later went on to explore its primary target, asteroid 433 Eros.

How Mathilde Got Its Name

The name is thought to honor the wife of astronomer Moritz Loewy, then the vice director of the Paris Observatory.

Want to see them more often?

Learn how to photograph a meteor shower.