This minor planet was named by the discoverer. Any reference of this name to a person or occurrence is unknown.
Unknown meaning
Among the many thousands of named minor planets, Lova is one of 120 asteroids, for which no official naming citation has been published. All of these low-numbered asteroids have numbers between and and were discovered between 1876 and the 1930s, predominantly by astronomers Auguste Charlois, Johann Palisa, Max Wolf and Karl Reinmuth .
Physical characteristics
In the Tholen classification, Lova is a common, dark C-type asteroid with a noisy spectrum, while in the Bus–Binzel SMASS classification, it is a hydrated, carbonaceous subtype.
Rotation period
In November 2017, a rotational lightcurve of Lova was obtained from photometric observations by Tom Polakis at the Command Module Observatory in Arizona. Lightcurve analysis gave a well-defined rotation period of hours with a brightness variation of magnitude. While not being a slow rotator, which have periods of 100 or more hours, Lovas period is significantly longer than the vast majority of asteroids, which rotate within 2.2 to 20 hours once around their axis. A lower-rated lightcurve by French amateur astronomerLaurent Bernasconi gave a similar period of hours with a higher amplitude of magnitude, indicative of an elongated shape. The results supersede a period determination with a lower limit of hours and amplitude of at least magnitude by Brian Warner at his Palmer Divide Observatory in Colorado from November 1999. In 2006, Warner revised his photometric data, though with no notable improvement or change for this asteroid.
According to the surveys carried out by the NEOWISE mission of NASA's Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer, the Infrared Astronomical SatelliteIRAS, and the Japanese Akari satellite, Lova measures, and kilometers in diameter and its surface has an albedo of, and, respectively. The Collaborative Asteroid Lightcurve Link adopts the results from IRAS, that is, a low albedo of 0.0524 and a diameter of 52.47 kilometers based on an absolute magnitude of 10.22. Alternative mean-diameter measurements published by the WISE team include,, and with corresponding albedos of,, and. Two asteroid occultations, observed on 5 April 2006 and 12 July 2007, gave a best-fit ellipse dimension of and kilometers, respectively, with the latter being the better rated one. These timed observations are taken when the asteroid passes in front of a distant star.