11351 Leucus
11351 Leucus is a mid-sized Jupiter trojan from the Greek camp, approximately in diameter. It is a target of the Lucy mission, scheduled for a flyby in April 2028. The assumed D-type asteroid is an exceptionally slow rotator with a rotation period of 466 hours. It was discovered on 12 October 1997 by the Beijing Schmidt CCD Asteroid Program at Xinglong Station in the Chinese province of Hebei, and later named after the Achaean warrior Leucus from Greek mythology.
Orbit and classification
Leucus is a dark Jupiter trojan asteroid in a 1:1 orbital resonance with Jupiter. It is located in the leading Greek camp at Jupiter's Lagrangian point, 60° ahead of its orbit. It is also a non-family asteroid in the Jovian background population.It orbits the Sun at a distance of 5.0–5.6 AU once every 12 years and 2 months. Its orbit has an eccentricity of 0.06 and an inclination of 12° with respect to the ecliptic. The body's observation arc begins with a precovery taken at the Siding Spring Observatory in July 1982, more than 15 years prior to its official discovery observation at Xinglong.
Exploration
''Lucy'' mission target
Leucus is planned to be visited by the Lucy spacecraft, which launched in 2021. The flyby is scheduled for 18 April 2028, and will approach the asteroid to a distance of at a relative velocity of.Physical characteristics
Leucus is a D-type asteroid, which is the dominant spectral type among the Jupiter trojans, with the remainder being mostly carbonaceous C-type and primitive P-type asteroids.Slow rotator
During spring 2013, a rotational lightcurve of Leucus was obtained from photometric observations made by astronomers Robert Stephens and Daniel Coley at the Center for Solar System Studies, California, using a 0.35/0.4-meter Schmidt-Cassegrain telescope. The lightcurve showed an exceptionally slow rotation period of 513.7 hours with a brightness variation of 0.53 in magnitude. No evidence of a non-principal axis rotation was found. It is one of the slowest rotators known to exist.In preparation for the planned visit by the Lucy spacecraft, Leucus was once again observed by astronomers Marc Buie at SwRI and Stefano Mottola at DLR in 2016. The obtained bimodal lightcurve gave a somewhat shorter period of 440 hours and an amplitude of 0.7 magnitude.