Quantum redactiones paginae "90482 Orcus" differant

Content deleted Content added
mNo edit summary
m versato--->versatis
Linea 36:
}}
 
'''90482 {{Data Asteroidum 90000|90482|nomen}}''',<ref>[[Nomina asteroidum]] iussu [[Unio Astronomica Internationalis|Unionis Astronomicae Internationalis]] imposita sunt.</ref> olim designationibus '''2004 DW''' agnitus, est [[asteroides]] [[Systema Solare|systematis solaris]] nostri, [[Corpus Ultraneptunianum|corporibus Ultraneptunianis]] attributus. [[Astronomia|Astronomis]] terrestribus [[magnitudo absoluta|magnitudinem absolutam]] {{Data Asteroidum 90000|90482|magnitudo}} monstrat. Die [[{{#time:j xg| {{Data Asteroidum 90000|90482|repertum}} }}]] [[{{#time:Y| {{Data Asteroidum 90000|90482|repertum}} }}]] a [[Michael E. Brown|Michaele E. Brown]], [[Ceadda Trujillo]], et [[David L. Rabinowitz|Davide L. Rabinowitz]] in [[Observatorium Palomar|Observatorio Palomar]] versatoversatis repertus est.<ref>{{Formula:Harvard MPC Discovery Circumstances}}</ref> <!-- what it is named for goes here -->
 
Rerum orbitalium ratio [[epocha (astronomia)|epochae]] {{#time:j xg Y| {{Data Asteroidum 90000|90482|epocha}} }} constitit. Qua epocha 90482 {{Data Asteroidum 90000|90482|nomen}} per dies {{#expr: (365.25 * {{Data Asteroidum 90000|90482|periodus}}) round 0}} circa solem movebatur. Axem orbitalem habebat [[Unitas astronomica|unitatum astronomicarum]] {{#expr: {{Data Asteroidum 90000|90482|axis semimaior}} round 2}} et eccentricitatem {{#expr: {{Data Asteroidum 90000|90482|eccentricitas}} round 2}}, distans igitur a sole [[perihelion|quam minime]] unitatibus {{#expr: {{Data Asteroidum 90000|90482|perihelion}} round 2}}, [[aphelion|quam maxime]] unitatibus {{#expr: {{Data Asteroidum 90000|90482|aphelion}} round 2}}. [[Inclinatio orbitalis]] {{#expr: {{Data Asteroidum 90000|90482|inclinatio}} round 2}}[[gradus (mensura)|°]] reperiebatur, [[anomalia media]] {{#expr: {{Data Asteroidum 90000|90482|anomalia media}} round 2}}°.
Linea 42:
<!--
Discovered 2004 Feb. 17 by M. Brown, C. Trujillo and D. Rabinowitz at Palomar.
Orcus was the Roman god of death, the counterpart of the Greek Pluto. Orcus collected the dead and carried them back to the underworld that he ruled.
NOTE: some special characters may not display properly (any characters within {} are an attempt to place the proper accent above a character)
<b>Reference:</b> 20041126/MPCPages.arc