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・ (2R)-3-sulfolactate dehydrogenase (NADP+)
・ (2R)-sulfolactate sulfo-lyase
・ (2Z,6E)-farnesyl-diphosphate diphosphate-lyase
・ (2Z,6Z)-farnesyl diphosphate lyase
・ (2Z,6Z)-farnesyl diphosphate synthase
・ (3-Aminopropyl)triethoxysilane
・ (3-methyl-2-oxobutanoate dehydrogenase (2-methylpropanoyl-transferring))-phosphatase
・ (3-methyl-2-oxobutanoate dehydrogenase (acetyl-transferring))
・ (303775) 2005 QU182
・ (307261) 2002 MS4
・ (307463) 2002 VU130
・ (307616) 2003 QW90
・ (308193) 2005 CB79
・ (308242) 2005 GO21
・ (308635) 2005 YU55
(308933) 2006 SQ372
・ (309239) 2007 RW10
・ (310071) 2010 KR59
・ (311999) 2007 NS2
・ (31345) 1998 PG
・ (315898) 2008 QD4
・ (316179) 2010 EN65
・ (31669) 1999 JT6
・ (322756) 2001 CK32
・ (32326) 2000 QO62
・ (33001) 1997 CU29
・ (332446) 2008 AF4
・ (33340) 1998 VG44
・ (33342) 1998 WT24
・ (341843) 2008 EV5


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(308933) 2006 SQ372 : ウィキペディア英語版
(308933) 2006 SQ372


| epoch = 2011-Feb-08 (2455600.5)
| aphelion = 1570 AU (Q)〔 ((Horizons ))〕
(Heliocentric 2006 AU)
| perihelion = 24.178 AU (q)
| semimajor = 796 AU (a)〔 (Heliocentric 1015 AU)
| eccentricity = 0.976
| period = 22,466 yr
(Heliocentric 32,347 yr)
| avg_speed =
| inclination = 19.446°
| asc_node = 197.42°
| mean_anomaly = 0.04957° (M)
| arg_peri = 122.51°
| satellites =
| physical_characteristics = yes
| dimensions = 110 km
60–140 km
| mass = ~1.7 kg
| density =
| surface_grav =
| escape_velocity =
| sidereal_day =
| axial_tilt =
| pole_ecliptic_lat =
| pole_ecliptic_lon =
| albedo =
| spectral_type =
| magnitude =
| abs_magnitude = 8.1〔
}}
is a small trans-Neptunian object discovered through the Sloan Digital Sky Survey by Andrew Becker, Andrew Puckett, and Jeremy Kubica on images first taken on September 27, 2006 (with precovery images dated to September 13, 2005).〔〔(An Icy Wanderer from the Oort Cloud )〕
It has a strongly eccentric orbit, crossing that of Neptune near perihelion but bringing it more than 1,500 AU from the Sun at aphelion.〔 It takes about 22,500 years to orbit the barycenter of the Solar System.〔 The large semi-major axis makes it similar to and 90377 Sedna.〔 With an absolute magnitude (H) of 8.1,〔 it is estimated to be about 60 to 140 km in diameter.〔 Michael Brown estimates that it has an albedo of 0.08 which would give a diameter of around 110 km.〔
The object could possibly be a comet.〔 The discoverers hypothesize that the object could come from the inner Oort cloud, but other scientists like California Institute of Technology's Michael Brown also consider other possibilities, as "it may have formed from debris just beyond Neptune (the Kuiper belt ) and been 'kicked' into its distant orbit by a planet like Neptune or Uranus".
==Perturbation==
More than half of the simulations of show that it gets too close to either Uranus or Neptune within the next 180 million years, sending it in a currently unknown direction. This makes it difficult to classify this object as only a centaur or a scattered disc object. The Minor Planet Center (MPC), which officially catalogues all trans-Neptunian objects, lists centaurs and SDOs together.〔 (29981) 1999 TD10 is another such object that blurs the two categories.
Given the extreme orbital eccentricity of this object, different epochs can generate quite different heliocentric unperturbed two-body best-fit solutions to the aphelion distance (maximum distance) of this object. With a 2005 epoch the object had an approximate period of about 22,000 years with aphelion at 1557 AU.〔 But using a 2011 epoch shows a period of about 32,000 years with aphelion at 2006 AU.〔 For objects at such high eccentricity, the Sun's barycentric coordinates are more stable than heliocentric coordinates.〔 Using JPL Horizons with an observed orbital arc of only 2.9 years, the barycentric orbital elements for epoch 2008-May-14 generate a semi-major axis of 796 AU and a period of 22,466 years.〔

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