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Best C Type

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Rankings use category fit, feature coverage, pricing signals, public reception, and recency. Affiliate relationships do not affect scores.

0.0 - 10.0
Best 1 1 Ceres
1 Ceres

Ceres is a unique dwarf planet residing within the asteroid belt. It’s the largest object in this region and classified as C-type, meaning it’s rich in water ice. The Dawn mission provided unprecedented data about its composition and geological features. Scientists study Ceres to understand the earl...

2 90 Antiope
90 Antiope

Asteroid 90 Antiope is a medium-sized main-belt asteroid notable as a binary system. Discovered in 1866, it consists of two asteroids with similar dimensions that orbit one another. This system offers scientists valuable data regarding the dynamics and evolution of close binary objects within our so...

3 10 Hygiea
10 Hygiea

The asteroid 10 Hygiea is a significant member of the Hygiea family within the main asteroid belt between Mars and Jupiter. It’s notable for being the fourth largest asteroid by volume and possesses a surprisingly rounded shape, as indicated by recent research. This discovery, made in 1849, raises q...

4 52 Europa
52 Europa

52 Europa is a substantial asteroid residing within the main asteroid belt between Mars and Jupiter. Discovered in 1858 by Hermann Goldschmidt, it’s notable as one of the largest known C-type asteroids. These asteroids are characterized by their dark composition and icy nature. It presents scientifi...

5 24 Themis
24 Themis

24 Themis is a substantial main-belt asteroid within the Themis family. Discovered in 1853, it’s notable as the first asteroid confirmed to possess water ice on its surface. This C-type asteroid offers valuable insights into the composition and evolution of early solar system objects. Scientists stu...

6 65 Cybele
65 Cybele

65 Cybele is a very large main-belt asteroid discovered in 1861 by Ernst Tempel, serving as the namesake for the Cybele group of asteroids.

7 93 Minerva
93 Minerva

Large C-type main-belt asteroid discovered by J.C. Watson in 1867, named after the Roman goddess of wisdom; two small moons, Aegis and Gorgoneion, were found in 2009.

8 45 Eugenia
45 Eugenia

Main-belt asteroid discovered by Hermann Goldschmidt in 1857, notable as one of the first asteroids confirmed to have a satellite, Petit-Prince, found in 1998.

9 88 Thisbe
88 Thisbe

88 Thisbe is one of the largest main-belt asteroids, discovered in 1866 by German-American astronomer Christian Heinrich Friedrich Peters at Clinton, New York.

10 152 Atala
152 Atala

A main-belt asteroid discovered by Paul and Prosper Henry in 1875 at Paris Observatory, named after a character in François-René de Chateaubriand's 1801 novel Atala.

11 157 Dejanira

A main-belt asteroid discovered by Paul and Prosper Henry in 1875 and named after Deianira, the wife of Heracles whose accidental gift of a poisoned robe caused his death.

12 31 Euphrosyne

Large C-type outer main-belt asteroid discovered by James Ferguson in 1854 and named after Euphrosyne, one of the three Graces of Greek mythology.

13 141 Lumen
141 Lumen

141 Lumen is a dark C-type asteroid from the outer regions of the asteroid belt, discovered by French astronomer Paul Henry in 1875 and named after a unit of luminous flux.

14 107 Camilla

One of the largest main-belt asteroids, discovered by Norman Pogson in 1868, named after the warrior queen in Virgil's Aeneid; a small companion moon was confirmed in 2001.

15 48 Doris
48 Doris

Main-belt asteroid discovered by Hermann Goldschmidt in 1857 and named after Doris, the sea goddess and mother of the fifty Nereids in Greek myth.

16 127 Johanna

127 Johanna is a dark C-type asteroid from the outer asteroid belt, discovered by French astronomer Prosper-Mathieu Henry in 1872 and named in honor of Joan of Arc.

17 41 Daphne
41 Daphne

Main-belt asteroid discovered by Hermann Goldschmidt in 1856 and named after Daphne, the naiad nymph transformed into a laurel tree in Greek myth.

18 162 Laurentia

A main-belt asteroid discovered by Paul and Prosper Henry in 1876 at Paris Observatory and named after Laurentia, a figure from early Roman legendary history.

19 120 Lachesis

Main-belt asteroid discovered by Alphonse Borrelly in 1872, named after Lachesis, the Fate in Greek mythology who measured the thread of each mortal's life.

20 131 Vala
131 Vala

131 Vala is a main-belt asteroid discovered in 1873 by Christian Heinrich Friedrich Peters and named after Völva, a seeress in Norse mythology who communicated with the spirit world.

21 191 Kolga
191 Kolga

Main-belt asteroid discovered by Johann Palisa in 1878, named after Kólga, one of the nine wave-daughters of the sea-giant Ægir in Norse mythology.

22 154 Bertha
154 Bertha

A main-belt asteroid discovered by Paul and Prosper Henry in 1875 at Paris Observatory and named after the Germanic feminine given name Bertha.

23 128 Nemesis

128 Nemesis is a large and very dark C-type asteroid in the main belt, discovered by American astronomer James Craig Watson in 1872 and named after the Greek goddess of retribution.

24 173 Ino
173 Ino

A main-belt asteroid discovered by Alphonse Borrelly in 1877 and named after Ino, the sea goddess of Greek mythology who aided the shipwrecked Odysseus by giving him a protective veil.

25 78 Diana
78 Diana

78 Diana is a dark C-type asteroid discovered in 1863 by German astronomer Karl Theodor Robert Luther at the Bilk Observatory in Düsseldorf.

26 164 Eva
164 Eva

A main-belt asteroid discovered by Paul and Prosper Henry in 1876 at Paris Observatory, notable as one of the earliest numbered minor planets to bear the simple given name Eva.

27 155 Scylla
155 Scylla

A main-belt asteroid discovered by Johann Palisa in 1875 and named after Scylla, the six-headed sea monster of Greek mythology who menaced sailors in the Strait of Messina.

28 175 Andromache

A main-belt asteroid discovered by James Craig Watson in 1877 and named after Andromache, the steadfast Trojan queen and wife of Hector celebrated in Homer's Iliad.

29 134 Sophrosyne

134 Sophrosyne is a dark C-type asteroid discovered by German astronomer Robert Luther in 1873, named after the ancient Greek philosophical concept of moderation and self-control.

30 156 Xanthippe

A main-belt asteroid discovered by Johann Palisa in 1875 and named after Xanthippe, the wife of the Athenian philosopher Socrates, remembered for her sharp temperament.

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