119 km -- diameter of the asteroid5 AstraeaMain Belt asteroids 5 Astraea ("ass TREE uh") is a large Main belt asteroid. Its surface is highly reflective (bright) and the composition is probably a mixture of nickel- iron with magnesium- and iron- silicates. Astraea was the fifth asteroid discovered
130 km -- range of a Scud-A missile
136 km -- diameter of the asteroid8 Flora8 Flora ("FLOR uh") is a large, bright Main belt asteroid. It is probably a mixture of silicate rock and nickel- iron metals. It is the largest member of the Flora asteroid family, a remnant of a larger parent body that shattered in a violent collision.
162 km -- diameter of PuckPuck is a moon of Uranus. It was discovered by Voyager 2 in 1986. Little is known about it aside from its orbit, its size, and its dark albedo (approximately 0. Most of the moons of Uranus are named after characters in Shakespeare or Alexander Pope. In Ce, the largest of UranusUranus (pronounced "YOOR--nus", or "yr-AYN-us") is the seventh planet from the Sun. It is a gas giant and the third largest by diameter. It was named after the Greek god Ouranos. Its symbol is either Unicode ♅ (mostly astrological) or (mostly astro' inner moons
167 km -- diameter of AmaltheaAmalthea (pronounced "am al THEE a") is the third of Jupiter's known moons. It was discovered on September 9 1892 by Edward Emerson Barnard using the 36 inch (91 cm) refractor telescope at Lick Observatory. Amalthea was the last moon to be discovered by d, one of Jupiter's inner moons
170 km -- diameter of HimaliaHimalia (pronounced "hi MAL iya") is a moon of Jupiter. It was discovered by Charles Dillon Perrine at the Lick Observatory in 1904 and is named after the nymph Himalia who bore three sons of Zeus. On December 19, 2000, the Cassini space probe, en route t, one of Jupiter's moons
178 km -- diameter of Janus, one of Saturn's moons