This table is available for ADQL queries and through the TAP endpoint.
Resource Description:
Complete Asteroid Data from the Minor Planet Center (MPC), updated once per month. The MPC operates at the Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory under the auspices of Division III of the International Astronomical Union (IAU).
The MPC Orbit database contains orbital elements of minor planets that have been published in the Minor Planet Circulars, the Minor Planet Orbit Supplement and the Minor Planet Electronic Circulars.
For a list of all services and tables belonging to this table's resource, see Information on resource 'Minor Planet Center - Asteroid Orbital Data'
Resource Reference URL: http://www.minorplanetcenter.org/
This table has an associated publication. If you use data from it, it may be appropriate to reference 1980CeMec..22...63M (ADS BibTeX entry for the publication) either in addition to or instead of the service reference.
To cite the table as such, we suggest the following BibTeX entry:
@MISC{vo:mpc_mpcorb, year=2009, title={Minor Planet Center - Asteroid Orbital Data}, author={Williams, G. and Keys, S. and Rudenko, M. and Galache, J.L.}, url={https://dc.zah.uni-heidelberg.de/tableinfo/mpc.mpcorb}, howpublished={{VO} resource provided by the {GAVO} Data Center} }
Sorted alphabetically. [Sort by DB column index]
Name | Table Head | Description | Unit | UCD |
---|---|---|---|---|
alt_target_name | Alt_target_name | N/A | N/A | N/A |
arc_length | Arc | Length of observed arcs for single-opposition orbits. | d | time.interval |
arg_perihel | Arg. Perihel. | Argument of Perihelion, J2000.0 | deg | src.orbital.periastron |
bib_reference | Ref | Origin of the data | N/A | meta.bib |
computer | Computer | Identifies the computer of the orbit | N/A | meta.note |
designation | Number/Prov. | Asteroid number or provisional designation. | N/A | meta.id;meta.main |
eccentricity | e | Eccentricity of the orbit | N/A | src.orbital.eccentricity |
first_obs | Disc. year | Discovery year for multi-opposition orbits. | a | time.epoch |
inclination | i | Inclination of the orbit to the ecliptic, J2000.0 | deg | src.orbital.inclination |
last_obs | Last Obs. | Date of last observation | a | time.epoch;obs |
long_asc | Asc. Node | Longitude of ascending node, J2000.0 | deg | src.orbital.node |
mag | Mag | Absolute Magnitude of the asteroid, i.e., the magnitude of the asteroid at a distance of 1 AU when viewed at a phase angle of 0°. | mag | phys.magAbs |
mean_anomaly | Mean Anom. | Mean anomaly at the epoch | deg | src.orbital.meanAnomaly |
mean_motion | Mean Motion | Mean Daily Motion | deg/d | pos.pm;arith.diff;phys.veloc |
n_obs | #Obs | Number of Observations | N/A | meta.number;obs |
n_opp | #Opp | Number of Oppositions | N/A | meta.number |
name | Name | Human-readable designation of the Asteroid. | N/A | meta.id |
orb_epoch | Epoch | Epoch of the orbit (julian years) | a | time.epoch |
orbit_class | Class | Orbit family this object belongs to (note that the classification is based on cuts in osculating element space and is not 100% reliable. | N/A | src.class |
orbit_flags | Flags | Additional classification flag(s) as comma-separated human-readable phrases | N/A | src.class |
perturbers | Perturbers | Information on orbit perturbers; see table note. [Note 1] | N/A | meta.note |
rms_fit | rms | RMS Residual of orbital fit | arcsec | stat.fit.residual |
semimaj_ax | Semimaj. ax. | Orbital semimajor axis | AU | phys.size.smajAxis |
slope | Slope | Slope Parameter G. It describes how the magnitude of the asteroid varies as a function of changing illumination (phase angle) | N/A | src.morph.param |
uncertainty_parameter | Uncertainty | Quality code (0 is best) as per http://www.minorplanetcenter.org/iau/info/UValue.html. Or: E -- the orbital eccentricity was assumed; D -- for one-opposition orbits this means a double (or multiple) designation is involved; F -- an e-assumed double (or multiple) designation is involved. | N/A | meta.code.error |
Columns that are parts of indices are marked like this.
The following services may use the data contained in this table:
VO nerds may sometimes need VOResource XML for this table.
More information is available at http://www.minorplanetcenter.net/iau/info/Perturbers.html
The first part of this is a descriptor of the system used for the perturbing planets according to the follow scheme:
(space) Undefined/unknown, assume JPL DE200 positions + masses d JPL DE200 positions + masses f JPL DE245 positions + masses h JPL DE403 positions + masses j JPL DE405 positions + masses
The second part is a two-digit hexadecimal number to be interpreted bitwise (this was taken literally from the MPC data and will probably be parsed out at some point). In the meantime, here is the key to the bits:
Perturber Bit Value Hygiea 0 1 Earth 1 2 Bits 1 + 2 must both be set or both be unset! Moon 2 4 Ceres 3 8 Pallas 4 16 Vesta 5 32 Eunomia 6 64
Sum the values of the included perturbers and convert to hexadecimal. Since orbits will always include the major planets Mercury to Neptune there is no need to include these bodies in the above scheme (other than allowing the earth and moon to be treated separately).
Some examples of coarse and precise indicators are:
Coarse Precise Perturbers (Mercury-Neptune+...)
The default for Minor Planet Center orbits will henceforth be h (DE403), M-v (coarse) and 38 or 3E (precise, depending on whether the object is an earth-approacher or not). Additional perturbers will be added as necessary.
Copyright and such:
This research has made use of data and/or services provided by the International Astronomical Union's Minor Planet Center. Updated data files are available at http://www.minorplanetcenter.org/iau/mpc.html