Asteroid 1130 Skuld, was discovered on September 2, 1929 by Karl Reinmuth at Heidelberg, Germany, and independently co-discovered on September 12, 1929 by Arnold Schwassmann and Arno A. Wachmann at Bergedorf Observatory in Hamburg, Germany.
1130 Skuld has a period of 3 years, 119 days and was named for one of the three Norns in Norse mythology: Skuld
|
Minor planets navigator
|
|
- 1129 Neujmina
- 1130 Skuld
- 1131 Porzia
|
|
|
Small Solar System bodies
|
|
| Minor planets |
- Designation
- Groups
- Moons
- Meanings of names
- Pronunciation of names
|
|
| Asteroids |
- Aten asteroid
- Families
- Jupiter Trojans
- Main-belt
- Near-Earth
- Spectral types
|
|
| Distant minor planets |
- Centaurs
- Damocloids
- Neptune trojans
- Trans-Neptunian objects
- Detached
- Kuiper belt
- Oort cloud
- Scattered disc
|
|
|
| Comets |
- Extinct
- Great
- Lost
- Main-belt
- Non-periodic
- Periodic
- Sungrazing
|
|
| Meteoroids |
- Bolide
- Dust
- Fireball
- Meteor
- Meteorite
- Tektite
|
|
| Lists / categories |
- Asteroid groups and families
- Asteroid moons
- Binary asteroids
- Minor planets
|
|