Before Medesicaste was named, it belonged to a small group of only 8 unnamed minor planets with a designated number smaller than 5000. (All of them are Jupiter trojans or near-Earth asteroids). Since then, several have already been named :
Medesicaste is an assumed C-type asteroid.[9] It has a V–I color index of 0.85, slightly below that seen for most Jovian D-type asteroids(also seen table below).
Rotation period
A rotational lightcurve of Medesicaste was first obtained by Stefano Mottola in November 1991, using the Loiano 1.52-meter telescope at Bologna Observatory in Italy.[10] Lightcurve analysis gave a rotation period of 8.8129±0.0025 hours with a brightness amplitude of 0.46 magnitude (U=3).[10] In September 2012, it was also observed in the R-band by astronomers at the Palomar Transient Factory in California (U=2).[9][13]
According to the surveys carried out by the Japanese Akari satellite and the NEOWISE mission of NASA's Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer, Medesicaste measures between 62.10 and 65.93 kilometers in diameter and its surface has an albedo between 0.060 and 0.079.[7][8] It has not been observed by the Supplemental IRAS Minor Planet Survey.[17] The Collaborative Asteroid Lightcurve Link assumes a standard albedo for a carbonaceous asteroid of 0.057 and calculates a diameter of 63.91 kilometers based on an absolute magnitude of 9.7.[9]
100+ largest Jupiter trojans
Largest Jupiter Trojans by survey(A) (mean-diameter in kilometers; YoD: Year of Discovery)
Note: missing data was completed with figures from the JPL SBDB (query) and from the LCDB (query form) for the WISE/NEOWISE and SIMPS catalogs, respectively. These figures are given in italics. Also, listing is incomplete above #100.
Notes
^Lightcurve plots of (4715) 1989 TS1 from Jan 2015, Dec 2015, Feb 2017 and 2018 by Robert Stephens at the Center for Solar System Studies (U81). Quality code is 3/3/3/3 (lightcurve rating at CS3). Summary figures at the LCDB and CS3.
^ abcdUsui, Fumihiko; Kuroda, Daisuke; Müller, Thomas G.; Hasegawa, Sunao; Ishiguro, Masateru; Ootsubo, Takafumi; et al. (October 2011). "Asteroid Catalog Using Akari: AKARI/IRC Mid-Infrared Asteroid Survey". Publications of the Astronomical Society of Japan. 63 (5): 1117–1138. Bibcode:2011PASJ...63.1117U. doi:10.1093/pasj/63.5.1117. (online, AcuA catalog p. 153)