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- Q619827 subject Q19795229.
- Q619827 subject Q7607672.
- Q619827 subject Q8380144.
- Q619827 subject Q8380148.
- Q619827 subject Q8461630.
- Q619827 subject Q9125687.
- Q619827 absoluteMagnitude "13.5".
- Q619827 absoluteMagnitude "13.71".
- Q619827 abstract "6498 Ko, provisional designation 1992 UJ4, is a stony asteroid and extremely slow rotator from the inner regions of the asteroid belt, about 4 kilometers in diameter. It was discovered on 26 October 1992, by Japanese amateur astronomers Kin Endate and Kazuro Watanabe at Kitami Observatory in eastern Hokkaidō, Japan.The S-type asteroid is a member of the Flora family, one of the largest groups of stony asteroids in the main-belt. It orbits the Sun at a distance of 1.9–2.7 AU once every 3 years and 5 months (1,258 days). Its orbit shows an eccentricity of 0.17 and an inclination of 8 degrees from the plane of the ecliptic.Although the asteroid does not cross the orbit of any planet, it does make close approaches to other large asteroids, such as 29 Amphitrite, which it approached within 0.038 AU in 1915. Further close approaches will take place in 2025 and 2135 at a distance of 0.012 and 0.009 AU, respectively. On 14 November 2009, the asteroid also made a close encounter with 3 Juno at a distance of about 0.047 AU.A photometric light-curve analysis by Czech astronomer Petr Pravec at the Ondřejov Observatory in 2012, rendered an exceptionally long rotation period of 500 hours with a brightness amplitude of 0.6 in magnitude. The Collaborative Asteroid Lightcurve Link assumes an albedo of 0.24, a typical value for asteroids with a stony surface composition, and identical to the albedo of the Flora family's namesake, the asteroid 8 Flora.The minor planet was named in honor of Japanese scientist Ko Nagasawa (b. 1932). After retiring from the Earthquake Research Institute, University of Tokyo in 1994, he worked for the Public Information Office at the National Astronomical Observatory of Japan. Nagasawa has long been interested in the study of meteors, and he obtained many high-quality photographic spectra of the 1965-Leonid meteor shower at the Dodaira Station, after which the minor planet 14313 Dodaira is named. The name was proposed by the second discoverer, Kazuro Watanabe, following a suggestion by Japanese astronomer Kōichirō Tomita.".
- Q619827 albedo "0.24".
- Q619827 apoapsis "3.9872320477671E11".
- Q619827 discovered "1992-10-26".
- Q619827 discoverer Q541488.
- Q619827 discoverer Q561077.
- Q619827 epoch "27 June 2015 (JD2457200.5)".
- Q619827 formerName "1964 PM".
- Q619827 orbitalPeriod "297216.0".
- Q619827 periapsis "2.8368244220841E11".
- Q619827 rotationPeriod "1800000.0".
- Q619827 wikiPageExternalLink page_cou.html.
- Q619827 wikiPageExternalLink GenerateALCDEFPage_Local.php?AstInfo=6498%7CKo.
- Q619827 wikiPageExternalLink NumberedMPs005001.html.
- Q619827 wikiPageExternalLink lcdbsummaryquery.php.
- Q619827 wikiPageExternalLink lightcurvedatabase.html.
- Q619827 wikiPageExternalLink books?id=aeAg1X7afOoC&pg.
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- Q619827 wikiPageWikiLink Q5193851.
- Q619827 wikiPageWikiLink Q541488.
- Q619827 wikiPageWikiLink Q543157.
- Q619827 wikiPageWikiLink Q561077.
- Q619827 wikiPageWikiLink Q675076.
- Q619827 wikiPageWikiLink Q7012.
- Q619827 wikiPageWikiLink Q727817.
- Q619827 wikiPageWikiLink Q7607672.
- Q619827 wikiPageWikiLink Q79852.
- Q619827 wikiPageWikiLink Q8380144.
- Q619827 wikiPageWikiLink Q8380148.
- Q619827 wikiPageWikiLink Q8461630.
- Q619827 wikiPageWikiLink Q9125687.
- Q619827 wikiPageWikiLink Q991541.
- Q619827 absMagnitude "13.5".
- Q619827 absMagnitude "13.71".
- Q619827 albedo "0.24".
- Q619827 altNames "1964".
- Q619827 aphelion "2.6653".
- Q619827 discovered "1992-10-26".
- Q619827 discoverer Q541488.
- Q619827 discoverer Q561077.
- Q619827 epoch "2015-06-27".
- Q619827 name "6498".
- Q619827 perihelion "1.8963".
- Q619827 period "1.08558144E8".
- Q619827 rotation "1800000.0".
- Q619827 type Place.
- Q619827 type CelestialBody.
- Q619827 type Location.
- Q619827 type Place.
- Q619827 type Planet.
- Q619827 type Thing.
- Q619827 type Q634.
- Q619827 comment "6498 Ko, provisional designation 1992 UJ4, is a stony asteroid and extremely slow rotator from the inner regions of the asteroid belt, about 4 kilometers in diameter. It was discovered on 26 October 1992, by Japanese amateur astronomers Kin Endate and Kazuro Watanabe at Kitami Observatory in eastern Hokkaidō, Japan.The S-type asteroid is a member of the Flora family, one of the largest groups of stony asteroids in the main-belt.".
- Q619827 label "6498 Ko".
- Q619827 name "6498 Ko".