79360 Sila–Nunam

79360 Sila–Nunam
Sila–Nunam imaged by the Hubble Space Telescope in 2004
Discovery
Discovered byJ. X. Luu
D. C. Jewitt
C. A. Trujillo
J. Chen
Discovery siteMauna Kea Obs.
Discovery date4 February 1997
Designations
(79360) Sila–Nunam
Pronunciation/ˈslə ˈnnəm/
1997 CS29
TNO (cubewano)
AdjectivesSilaupian, Nunaupian
Orbital characteristics
Epoch 13 January 2016 (JD 2457400.5)
Uncertainty parameter 3
Observation arc6940 days (19.00 yr)
Aphelion44.8452 AU (6.70875 Tm)
Perihelion43.3862 AU (6.49048 Tm)
44.1157 AU (6.59961 Tm)
Eccentricity0.016536
293.02 yr (107026 d)
331.884°
0.00336367°/day
Inclination2.240951°
304.34152°
≈ 20 October 2055
±3 months
222.597°
Known satellites1 at 2,777 ± 19 km (1,725 ± 10 mi)
Earth MOID42.3938 AU (6.34202 Tm)
Jupiter MOID37.9599 AU (5.67872 Tm)
Physical characteristics
Dimensions250±30 km (Sila)
235±28 km (Nunam)
(335+41
−42
 km
combined)
Mass1.084 ± 0.022×1019 kg (combined)
Mean density
0.72+0.37
0.22
g/cm3
300.24 h (12.510 d)
12.50995 ± 0.00036 d
0.086+0.026
0.017
Temperature~42 K (−384 °F)
U−B=0.73
B−V=1.08
V−R=0.66±0.04
B−R=1.74
V−I=1.25±0.03
R−J=1.4
V−J=2.06±0.03
J−H=0.38±0.08
V−H=2.45±0.08
21.54–21.78 (2014–2015)
(combined) 5.5,
(individual) 6.2 & 6.3 (diff. = 0.12),
5.2

    79360 Sila–Nunam (provisional designation 1997 CS29) is a cold classical Kuiper belt object (cubewano) and binary system made up of components of almost equal size, called Sila and Nunam, orbiting beyond Neptune in the Solar System. The name of the system is the combined names of the two bodies, Sila and Nunam.