In the
Tholen classification,
Griqua spectral type is ambiguous, closest to a common
C-type asteroid and somewhat similar to a primitive
P-type asteroid (CP). The asteroid has also been characterized as a "brighter"
B-type asteroid in both the Tholen- and SMASS-like taxonomy of the
Small Solar System Objects Spectroscopic Survey (S3OS2).
Rotation period In November 2000, a rotational
lightcurve of
Griqua was obtained from
photometric observations by Colin Bembrick at the
Mount Tarana Observatory in Australia. Lightcurve analysis gave a well-defined
rotation period of 6.907 hours with a brightness variation of 0.25
magnitude (). In 2009, follow-up observations by Jean and Milan Strajnic ,
Alain Klotz and
Raoul Behrend as well as observations in the S-band by astronomers at the
Palomar Transient Factory in California gave a concurring period of 6.891 and 6.9 hours with an amplitude of 0.23 and 0.24 magnitude, respectively (). The result supersedes a measurement of 7 hours made in the 1970s ().
Diameter and albedo According to the surveys carried out by the Infrared Astronomical Satellite
IRAS, the Japanese
Akari satellite and the
NEOWISE mission of NASA's
Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer,
Griqua measures between 25.60 and 30 kilometers in diameter and its surface has an
albedo between 0.0667 and 0.091. The
Collaborative Asteroid Lightcurve Link adopts the results obtained by IRAS, that is, an albedo of 0.0667 with a diameter of 29.90 kilometers based on an
absolute magnitude of 11.18, while fragmentary
radiometric observations in the 1970s determined a diameter of 31.0 kilometer and a derived albedo of 0.055 (TRIAD). == Naming ==