78799 Xewioso
78799 Xewioso is a trans-Neptunian object located in the inner edge of the Kuiper belt. It has a dark surface with a diameter between. It was discovered on 10 December 2002 by astronomers at Palomar Observatory in California.
History
Discovery
Xewioso was discovered on 10 December 2002 by a team of astronomers at Palomar Observatory in California. The discovery team included Chad Trujillo, Michael E. Brown, Eleanor F. Helin, Steven Pravdo, Kenneth Lawrence, Michael D. Hicks, who were using Palomar's Samuel Oschin telescope. Follow-up observations were taken by Trujillo using Palomar's telescope on 4 and 5 January 2003, and results were reported to the Minor Planet Center. The team's discovery of Xewioso alongside the trans-Neptunian objects and was announced by the MPC on 5 January 2003. The discovery of Xewioso formed part of Trujillo and Brown's Caltech Wide Area Sky Survey at Palomar Observatory, which aimed to find bright, Pluto-sized Kuiper belt objects like,, and.In December 2003, the MPC published the first identified precovery observations of Xewioso, which included a pair of photographic plates from Palomar Observatory's Digitized Sky Survey. The earliest of these photographic plates came from 17 December 1989, which was found by Reiner M. Stoss. This 1989 plate remains as the earliest known precovery observation of Xewioso.
Name and number
The object is named after Xevioso, a thunder god in the mythologies of the Ewe and Fon peoples of West Africa. The naming of this object was announced by the International Astronomical Union's Working Group for Small Body Nomenclature on 1 September 2025. Before Xewioso was officially named, it was known by its provisional designation, which indicates the year and half-month of the object's discovery date. Xewioso's minor planet catalog number of 78799 was given by the MPC on 6 February 2004.Orbit and classification
Xewioso orbits the Sun at a distance of 28–47 AU once about every 230 years. Since its average orbital distance or semi-major axis is greater than Neptune's, Xewioso is considered a trans-Neptunian object. Its orbit has an eccentricity of 0.25 and an inclination of 14° with respect to the ecliptic. It previously passed perihelion in 1926, when it was nearest to the Sun.Xewioso orbits at the inner edge of the Kuiper belt with a high orbital inclination, so it can be considered an inner classical Kuiper belt object of the dynamically "hot" population. Because Xewioso's orbit crosses Neptune's orbit, it can also be technically considered a centaur according to the Deep Ecliptic Survey's definition.