In the
Tholen taxonomy,
Schorria spectral type is closest to that of a carbonaceous
C-type and somewhat similar to that of an
X-type asteroid though with a noisy spectrum (CX:).
Slow rotator In March 2009, a rotational
lightcurve of
Schorria was obtained from
photometric observations by American astronomers
Brian Warner and
Robert Stephens. Light curve analysis of the two astronomer's combined data set of almost 2000 photometric observations revealed that this Mars-crosser is one of the
slowest rotating asteroids known to exist. It has a
rotation period of hours, or about 52 days, with a high brightness variation of in
magnitude (), which is indicative of a non-spheroidal shape. The body was also suspected to be in a tumbling state. However, no significant evidence of such a non-principal axis rotation could be found.
Diameter and albedo According to the space-based survey by NASA's
Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer with its subsequent
NEOWISE mission,
Schorria measures () kilometers in diameter and its surface has an albedo of (). Based on a generic magnitude-to-diameter conversion, the body measures between 7 and 15 kilometers, for an
absolute magnitude at 13 and an albedo in the range of 0.05 to 0.25, while Warner/Stephens estimated a diameter of approximately 9 kilometers in 2009. The
Collaborative Asteroid Lightcurve Link calculates a diameter of 5.04 kilometers based on an albedo of 0.40, which is contrary to an expected low albedo for dark, carbonaceous CX-type asteroids as classified by Tholen, but typical for the descendants of the
E-belt, a hypothesized population of primordial asteroids, which the
E-type Hungarian asteroids with high inclinations and a semi-major axis of 1.9 AU are thought to have originated from. == Notes ==