51 Nemausa is a large main-beltasteroid that was discovered on January 22, 1858, by Joseph Jean Pierre Laurent. Laurent made the discovery from the private observatory of Benjamin Valz in Nîmes, France. The house, at 32 rue Nationale in Nîmes, has a plaque commemorating the discovery. With Laurent's permission, Valz named the asteroid after the Celtic god Nemausus, the patron god and namesake of Nîmes during Roman times.[7]
The first stellaroccultation was observed on August 17, 1979, from the Gissar and Alma-Ata observatories produced two chords which were used to estimate a diameter of 150 km for the asteroid.
[10]
This is close to the present-day estimate of 147.9 km. Since then 51 Nemausa has been observed 20 times[11] in stellar occultation.
Light curve inversion model DAMIT1065 is a good match to a seven-chord occultation observed on 3 September 2016, from which an equivalent mean diameter of 146.4 km, and an equivalent Surface mean diameter of 150.3 km was obtained.
^Flattening derived from the maximum aspect ratio (c/a): , where (c/a) = 0.77±0.04.[3]
References
^John Craig (1869) The Universal English Dictionary
^"Diameters". Astronomical Applications Department of the U.S. Naval Observatory. Archived from the original on 27 September 2011. Retrieved 23 May 2008.
^ abcdeP. Vernazza et al. (2021) VLT/SPHERE imaging survey of the largest main-belt asteroids: Final results and synthesis. Astronomy & Astrophysics 54, A56
^Reynolds, C. M.; et al. (March 2009), "Compositional Study of 51 Nemausa: A Possible Carbonaceous Chondrite-like Asteroid", 40th Lunar and Planetary Science Conference, (Lunar and Planetary Science XL), held March 23–27, 2009 in The Woodlands, Texas, vol. 73, Bibcode:2009LPI....40.1285R.