This minor planet was named after the German state of Thuringia (German: Thüringen). The naming was proposed by the captain of the ocean liner SS Thuringia, which was a ship in the fleet of the Hamburg America Line, on which the discoverer, Walter Baade, travelled twice on his visits to New York in the 1920s. As the captain of the SS Thuringia was an amateur astronomer, he was invited by Baade to name one of his discoveries. The naming was mentioned in The Names of the Minor Planets by Paul Herget in 1955 (H 90).[3]
In October 1998, a rotational lightcurve of Thüringia was obtained from photometric observations by astronomers of the Minnesota State University Moorhead at Paul Feder Observatory. Analysis of the classically shaped bimodal lightcurve gave a well-defined rotation period of 8.166±0.006 hours with a high brightness variation of 0.66±0.03magnitude, indicative of an irregular, non-spherical shape (U=3).[10][11] In October 2007, another period determination by Federico Manzini, Hiromi Hamanowa and Hiroko Hamanowa determined a period of 8.16446±0.00006 hours and an amplitude of 0.52±0.01 magnitude (U=3).[11][13] In 2011, a modeled lightcurve using data from the Uppsala Asteroid Photometric Catalogue (UAPC) and other sources gave a sidereal period 8.16534 hours, as well as a spin axis of (120.0°, −52.0°) in ecliptic coordinates (λ, β) (U=2).[12]
Diameter and albedo
According to the survey carried out by the Infrared Astronomical Satellite IRAS, the NEOWISE mission of NASA's Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer (WISE), and the Japanese Akari satellite, Thüringia measures (53.35±5.2), (53.714±0.361) and (58.00±0.70) kilometers in diameter and its surface has a low albedo of (0.0471±0.011), (0.047±0.006) and (0.041±0.001), respectively.[7][8][9]
The Collaborative Asteroid Lightcurve Link derives an albedo of 0.0564 and a diameter of 53.45 km based on an absolute magnitude of 10.1.[11] Further published mean-diameters and albedos by the WISE team include (49.91±14.77 km), (50.24±13.36 km), (53.310±14.66 km), (53.333±18.03 km) and (62.572±1.232 km) with corresponding albedos of (0.06±0.04), (0.05±0.04), (0.0501±0.0465), (0.0528±0.0460), and (0.0342±0.0200).[6][11]
^ abcMasiero, Joseph R.; Grav, T.; Mainzer, A. K.; Nugent, C. R.; Bauer, J. M.; Stevenson, R.; et al. (August 2014). "Main-belt Asteroids with WISE/NEOWISE: Near-infrared Albedos". The Astrophysical Journal. 791 (2): 11. arXiv:1406.6645. Bibcode:2014ApJ...791..121M. doi:10.1088/0004-637X/791/2/121.
^ abcUsui, Fumihiko; Kuroda, Daisuke; Müller, Thomas G.; Hasegawa, Sunao; Ishiguro, Masateru; Ootsubo, Takafumi; et al. (October 2011). "Asteroid Catalog Using Akari: AKARI/IRC Mid-Infrared Asteroid Survey". Publications of the Astronomical Society of Japan. 63 (5): 1117–1138. Bibcode:2011PASJ...63.1117U. doi:10.1093/pasj/63.5.1117. (online, AcuA catalog p. 153)