Achilles was discovered on 22 February 1906, by the German astronomerMax Wolf at theHeidelberg-Königstuhl State Observatory in southern Germany. It was the first discovery of a Jupiter trojan, although(12126) 1999 RM11 had been observed asA904 RD two years previously. This body, however, remained unconfirmed as the observation period was not long enough to calculate an orbit.August Kopff, a colleague of Wolf at Heidelberg, then discovered617 Patroclus eight months after Achilles, and, in early 1907, he discovered the largest of all Jupiter trojans,624 Hektor.[13]
Achilles is the first known example of the stable solution of thethree-body problem worked out by French mathematicianJoseph Lagrange in 1772, after whom the minor planet1006 Lagrangea is named. After the discovery of other asteroids with similar orbital characteristics, which were also named after heroes from the Trojan War(see below), the term "Trojan asteroids" or "Jupiter trojans" became commonly used.[2] In addition, a rule was established that theL4 point was the "Greek camp", whereas theL5 point was the "Trojan camp", though not before each camp had acquired a "spy" (Hektor in the Greek camp and Patroclus in the Trojan camp).
In theTholen taxonomic scheme, Achilles is classified as aD-type asteroid with an unusual spectrum (DU).[3] ItsV–I color index of 0.94 is typical for most larger Jupiter trojans(see table below).
Achilles'srotation period of 7.3 hours is somewhat shorter than that of most other large Jupiter trojans but close to that of911 Agamemnon,3451 Mentor and3317 Paris, which are similar in size(see table below). Its low brightness amplitude is indicative of a rather spherical shape.[12] From July 2007 until September 2008, coordinatedphotometric observations were carried out by astronomers atSimeiz (Crimea),Rozhen (Bulgaria), Maidanak (Uzbekistan) andKharkiv (Ukraine) observatories.[10][14] Analysis of the obtainedlightcurves determined a period of7.306±0.002 hours with a brightness amplitude of 0.02–0.11magnitude (U=3/3/3/3).[12] Alternative period determinations by Cláudia Angeli (7.0 h),Robert Stephens (7.312 h),Stefano Mottola (7.32 h) andVincenzo Zappalà (12 h) are mostly in good agreement (U=1/3-/3/1).[12][15][14][16][17]
Note: missing data was completed with figures from the JPL SBDB (query) and from the LCDB (query form) for the WISE/NEOWISE and SIMPS catalogs, respectively. These figures are given in italics. Also, listing is incomplete above #100.
Thisminor planet's name was suggested by Austrian astronomerJohann Palisa. It was named afterAchilles, the legendary hero fromGreek mythology and central figure in Homer'sIliad which tells the accounts of theTrojan War(also see5700 Homerus and6604 Ilias). As an infant, Achilles was plunged in the River Styx by his mother Thetis(also see17 Thetis), thus rendering his body invulnerable excepting the heel by which he was held. He slew Hector (see also624 Hektor), the greatest Trojan warrior. He was eventually killed by an arrow in the heel by Paris (see3317 Paris).[2]