On Fri, 17 Jun 2005 16:03:03 -0500, "Sterling K. Webb" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 
wrote:

>    We've always known Vesta and its family were very distinct, so highly 
> differentiated, and now seems
>they had magma oceans, too, 

The "magma oceans" part seems to be a non-issue to me.  After all, wouldn't an
asteroid/planet/moon/whatever that melted completely pretty much by definition 
be at one time
completely melted?  In other words, for it to differentiate completely and not 
just have a
differentiated core surrounded by a primitive crust, wouldn't there HAVE to be 
some point where that
"crust" was liquid?  Or am I missing something, here?

>    Jupiter's Trojans are completely outside the picture, a class unto 
> themselves, and even Mars' Trojans
>are oddballs. Did you know Mars had Trojans?  I didn't. Google is wonderful.  
>Makes me wonder if somebody
>has ever tracked the orbital points 60 degrees ahead and behind the Earth...  
>Wouldn't it be great to have
>Trojans of our own?

I don't know, but I'd guess "probably", concidering that those Lagrange points 
have probably been
concidered as prime parking spaces for spacecraft.  Like how SoHo is parked at 
L1, and the James
Webb telescope is supposed to go at L2.  Without researching too much myself, I 
would figure that
someone has checked the area around L4 and L5, just to see if they are good 
neighborhoods.

(Edit-- I was wondering about some of those sorta-Earth-orbiting objects 
detected in the last few
years, thinking they might have been Lagrange related-- here are a couple of 
links on the topic)

http://www.space.com/scienceastronomy/solarsystem/second_moon_991029.html
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