Photometry American astronomer
Richard Binzel obtained the first rotational
lightcurve of
Rosseland in the early 1980s. It gave a
rotation period of 69.2 hours with a brightness variation of 0.13
magnitude (). During a survey of presumed
slow rotators, photometric observations by Brazilian Cláudia Angeli and colleges gave a period of 69.2 hours and an amplitude of 0.45 magnitude ().
Diameter and albedo According to the surveys carried out by the Japanese
Akari satellite and NASA's
Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer with its subsequent
NEOWISE mission,
Rosseland measures between 11.48 and 13.49 kilometers in diameter and its surface has an
albedo between 0.18 and 0.2253. The
Collaborative Asteroid Lightcurve Link assumes a standard albedo for stony asteroids of 0.20 and calculates a diameter of 12.85 kilometers with an
absolute magnitude of 11.82. == Naming ==