Aurelia is a large asteroid orbiting between Mars and Jupiter in the main portion of the asteroid belt. NASA JPL has not classified Aurelia as potentially hazardous because its orbit does not bring it close to Earth.
Aurelia orbits the sun every 1,530 days (4.19 years), coming as close as 1.94 AU and reaching as far as 3.25 AU from the sun. Aurelia is about 148.7 kilometers in diameter, making it larger than 99% of asteroids, comparable in size to the U.S. state of New Jersey.
The rotation of Aurelia has been observed. It completes a rotation on its axis every 16.78 hours.
Aurelia's spectral type F (Tholen) / None (SMASSII) indicates that it is likely to contain water, iron, nickel, cobalt, nitrogen, and ammonia.
Aurelia's orbit is 0.93 AU from Earth's orbit at its closest point. This means that there is a very wide berth between this asteroid and Earth at all times.
Orbital simulations conducted by NASA JPL's CNEOS do not show any close approaches to Earth.
Aurelia's orbit is determined by observations dating back to Jan. 24, 1899. It was last officially observed on April 1, 2023. The IAU Minor Planet Center records 4,223 observations used to determine its orbit.
Scientists have been able to determine this object's shape:
View asteroid Aurelia in 3D.
The position of Aurelia is indicated by a ◯ pink circle. Note that the object may not be in your current field of view. Use the controls below to adjust position, location, and time.