Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://wikidata.dbpedia.org/resource/Q3272478> ?p ?o }
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- Q3272478 subject Q15325966.
- Q3272478 subject Q7299836.
- Q3272478 subject Q7299946.
- Q3272478 subject Q7299979.
- Q3272478 subject Q8257314.
- Q3272478 absoluteMagnitude "20.4".
- Q3272478 abstract "6344 P-L is an Apollo, near-Earth, potentially hazardous asteroid that was discovered in the year 1960 by asteroid searchers Tom Gehrels, Ingrid van Houten-Groeneveld, and Cornelis Johannes van Houten. Last seen in 1960, it was lost, but rediscovered in 2007 as 2007 RR9. In other words, it was a lost asteroid from 1960 until it was recovered and recognized as the same object by Peter Jenniskens in 2007.The designation P-L stands for Palomar–Leiden, named after Palomar Observatory and Leiden Observatory, which collaborated on the fruitful Palomar–Leiden survey in the 1960s. Gehrels used Palomar's 48-inch Samuel Oschin telescope and shipped the photographic plates to Cornelis Johannes van Houten and Ingrid van Houten-Groeneveld at Leiden Observatory. The trio are credited with several thousand asteroid discoveries.It is either an asteroid or dormant comet nucleus, and it has a 4.7-year orbit around the Sun. The orbit goes out as far as Jupiter's but then back in, passing as close as 0.07 AU to the Earth, making it a collision risk.6344 P-L classifies as a potentially hazardous asteroid (PHA) with an minimum orbit intersection distance (MOID) of 0.028 AU and an estimated diameter of about 200–500 meters (based on an absolute magnitude of 20.4). It is probably a dormant comet, although it was not outgassing at the time of its recovery.".
- Q3272478 apoapsis "6.9928028680008E11".
- Q3272478 discoverer Q2048368.
- Q3272478 discoverer Q231642.
- Q3272478 discoverer Q312255.
- Q3272478 discoverer Q336095.
- Q3272478 epoch "13 January 2016 (JD2457400.5)".
- Q3272478 orbitalPeriod "405216.0".
- Q3272478 periapsis "1.3952993400189E11".
- Q3272478 wikiPageWikiLink Q14267.
- Q3272478 wikiPageWikiLink Q15325966.
- Q3272478 wikiPageWikiLink Q1811.
- Q3272478 wikiPageWikiLink Q186244.
- Q3272478 wikiPageWikiLink Q191684.
- Q3272478 wikiPageWikiLink Q2014814.
- Q3272478 wikiPageWikiLink Q2048368.
- Q3272478 wikiPageWikiLink Q207391.
- Q3272478 wikiPageWikiLink Q217208.
- Q3272478 wikiPageWikiLink Q231642.
- Q3272478 wikiPageWikiLink Q2428910.
- Q3272478 wikiPageWikiLink Q265392.
- Q3272478 wikiPageWikiLink Q28390.
- Q3272478 wikiPageWikiLink Q312255.
- Q3272478 wikiPageWikiLink Q336095.
- Q3272478 wikiPageWikiLink Q3858447.
- Q3272478 wikiPageWikiLink Q3900871.
- Q3272478 wikiPageWikiLink Q6684357.
- Q3272478 wikiPageWikiLink Q7299836.
- Q3272478 wikiPageWikiLink Q7299946.
- Q3272478 wikiPageWikiLink Q7299979.
- Q3272478 wikiPageWikiLink Q8257314.
- Q3272478 absMagnitude "20.4".
- Q3272478 aphelion "4.6744".
- Q3272478 discoverer Q2048368.
- Q3272478 discoverer Q231642.
- Q3272478 discoverer Q312255.
- Q3272478 discoverer Q336095.
- Q3272478 epoch "2016-01-13".
- Q3272478 name "6344".
- Q3272478 perihelion "0.9327".
- Q3272478 period "1.4800514400000003E8".
- Q3272478 type Place.
- Q3272478 type CelestialBody.
- Q3272478 type Location.
- Q3272478 type Place.
- Q3272478 type Planet.
- Q3272478 type Thing.
- Q3272478 type Q634.
- Q3272478 comment "6344 P-L is an Apollo, near-Earth, potentially hazardous asteroid that was discovered in the year 1960 by asteroid searchers Tom Gehrels, Ingrid van Houten-Groeneveld, and Cornelis Johannes van Houten. Last seen in 1960, it was lost, but rediscovered in 2007 as 2007 RR9.".
- Q3272478 label "6344 P–L".
- Q3272478 name "6344 P-L".