2014 OS393

2014 OS393
2014 OS393 imaged by the New Horizons spacecraft on 5 January 2019
Discovery
Discovered byNew Horizons KBO Search
Discovery siteHubble Space Telescope
Discovery date30 July 2014
Designations
2014 OS393
e31007AI · e3 · PT2
TNO · cubewano
distant · binary
Orbital characteristics
Epoch 8 August 2014 (JD 2456877.5)
Uncertainty parameter 8
Observation arc121 days
Aphelion45.350 AU
Perihelion42.534 AU
43.942 AU
Eccentricity0.0320
291.29 yr (106,394 d)
60.464°
0° 0m 12.24s / day
Inclination3.8151°
138.21°
78.660°
Physical characteristics
30 km (component)
42 km (effective)
36.214 h (1.5089 d)
0.04–0.10
0.04–0.15
V–I = 1.18
25.8
10.1
10.111

    2014 OS393, unofficially designated e31007AI, e3 and PT2, is a binary trans-Neptunian object in the classical Kuiper belt, the outermost region of the Solar System. It was first observed by the New Horizons KBO Search using the Hubble Space Telescope on 30 July 2014. Until 2015, when the object 486958 Arrokoth was selected, it was a potential flyby target for the New Horizons probe. Estimated to be approximately 42 kilometres (26 mi) in diameter, the object had a poorly determined orbit as it had been observed for only a few months. With MPEC 2024-E99 the Minor Planet Center published on 6 March 2024 additional observations by New Horizons KBO Search-Subaru which allowed to compute a fairly reliable orbit.