1221 Amor
1221 Amor is the namesake of the
Amor asteroids, a group of
near-Earth asteroids whose orbits range between those of
Earth and
Mars. Amors are often
Mars-crossers but they are not
Earth-crossers.
Eugène Joseph Delporte photographed Amor as it approached Earth to within 16 Gm; this was the first time that an asteroid was seen to approach Earth so closely. A month later,
1862 Apollo was seen to cross Earth's orbit, and the scientific community suddenly realised the potential threat these flying mountains presented.
Amor is named after the
Roman god of love, better known as
Cupid. See also
763 Cupido and
433 Eros, which is named after Cupid's
Greek conterpart. Coincidentally, 433 Eros, like 1221 Amor, makes close approaches to Earth. It is a
Mars-crosser as well.