- S-type asteroid
S-type asteroids are of a silicaceous ("stony") composition, hence the name. Approximately 17% of
asteroid s are of this type, making it the second most common after the C-type.Characteristics
S-types are moderately bright (with an
albedo of 0.10 to 0.22) and consist mainly of iron- andmagnesium -silicates. They are dominant in the innermain belt within 2.2 AU, common in the central belt within about 3 AU, but become rare further out. The largest is15 Eunomia (about 330 km wide across its longest dimension), with the next largest members by diameter being3 Juno ,29 Amphitrite ,532 Herculina and7 Iris . These largest S-types are visible in 10x50binoculars at most oppositions; the brightest, 7 Iris, can occasionally become brighter than +7.0, which is a higher magnitude than any asteroid except the unusually reflective4 Vesta .Their spectrum has a moderately steep slope at wavelengths shorter than 0.7
µm , and has moderate to weak absorption features around 1 µm and 2 µm. The 1 µm absorption is indicative of the presence ofsilicate s (stony minerals). Often there is also a broad but shallow absorption feature centered near 0.63 µm. The composition of these asteroids is similar to a variety of stonymeteorites which share similar spectral characteristics.-group asteroids
See also
asteroid spectral types MASS classification
In the SMASS classification, several generally "stony" types of asteroids are brought together into a wider S-group which contains the following types:
*A-type
*K-type
*L-type
*Q-type
*R-type
*a core S-type for asteroids having the most "typical" spectra for the S-group
*Sa, Sk, Sl, Sq, and Sr-types containing transition objects between the core S-type and the A, K, L, Q, and R-types, respectively. This whole "S" assemblage of asteroids is spectrally quite distinct from the carbonaceous C-group and the mostly metallic X-group.Tholen classification
In the Tholen classification the S-type is a very broad grouping which includes all the types in the SMASS S-group except for the A, Q, and R, which have particularly strong "stony" absorption features around 1 μm.
ee also
*
Asteroid spectral types
*L-type asteroid
*K-type asteroid
*X-type asteroid
*433 Eros References
*
S. J. Bus and R. P. Binzel "Phase II of the Small Main-belt Asteroid Spectroscopy Survey: A feature-based taxonomy", Icarus, Vol. 158, pp. 146 (2002).
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