BBC Sky at Night Magazine

View asteroid 14 Irene as it reaches opposition in the constellat­ion of Auriga

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Asteroid 14 Irene reaches opposition in January as it tracks across the northern part of the constellat­ion of Cancer, passing just to the south of mag. +4.0 Iota (i) Cancri. At 00:00 UT on 1 January, Irene is located 1.5˚ northwest of mag. +5.4 Nu (n) Cancri. From here it tracks northwest, passing 1.5˚ south of Rho1 Cancri and Rho2 Cancri between 7-12 January. These stars are of mag. +6.0 and +5.2 respective­ly. (As an aside, Rho1, or 55 Cancri, is a fascinatin­g star located 41 lightyears from Earth and known to have at least five exoplanets in orbit around it.)

Irene passes just over a degree south of Iota Cancri on 16/17 January, ending the month 3.5˚ west and a fraction north of this star. Its brightness increases slowly over the month, from mag. +9.9 on the 1st up to +9.3 on the 23rd, dipping slightly to +9.4 by the month’s close. Opposition occurs on the 24th, when Irene lies 2.316 AU from the Sun and 1.340 AU from Earth.

Irene is a large body orbiting within the main asteroid belt of our Solar System. It has tri-ellipsoida­l dimensions of 167km x 153km x 139km and is a dark siliceous, or S-type asteroid, with an albedo – a measure of a body’s reflectivi­ty – of 0.16. Irene takes 4.16 years to orbit the Sun and rotates on its axis once

every 15.1 hours. It’s orbital distance from the Sun varies from 3.02 AU at aphelion to 2.15 AU at perihelion. From Earth, its apparent magnitude can vary from a favourable +8.9 to +12.3. This month’s +9.3 opposition magnitude presents an excellent opportunit­y to spot it; binoculars will show it, but a small scope will give a better view.

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