Large asteroid to pass close to Earth on
Wednesday: NASA
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[April 19, 2017]
By Tom James
(Reuters) - An asteroid more than a quarter
mile (400 meters) wide will pass close to Earth on Wednesday, zooming by
at a distance of just over a million miles (1.8 million km), but with no
chance of impact, according to NASA scientists.
Smaller asteroids routinely make closer passes to Earth, but 2014 J025,
discovered in May 2014, will be the largest asteroid to come this near
to the planet since 2004, flying by at only about 4.6 times the distance
from the Earth to the Moon, 1.1 million miles (1.8 million km).
"We know the time that the object is going to be closest within seconds,
and the distance is known within hundreds of kilometers (miles)," Davide
Farnocchia, a mathematician at NASA's Near-Earth Object program, said by
telephone on Tuesday.
Having several years of data on the asteroid's trajectory gives
scientists the ability to predict its path very confidently, he added.
The asteroid, estimated to be between one-quarter and three-quarters of
a mile (600-1,400 meters) wide and twice as reflective as the Moon,
won't be visible to the naked eye, but sky watchers should be able to
view it with home telescopes for one or two nights starting on
Wednesday.
The approach of J025 will be the asteroid's closest for at least the
next 500 years.
In 2004, the 3.1-mile (5-km) wide asteroid Toutatis passed about four
lunar distances, or just under a million miles (1.6 million km) from
Earth.
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This color image of Earth, taken by NASA's Earth Polychromatic
Imaging Camera (EPIC), a four megapixel CCD camera and telescope on
July 6, 2015, and released on July 20, 2015. REUTERS/NASA/Handout
via Reuters/File Photo
Amateur astronomers may be watching J025's journey, but Farnocchia
said he and his colleagues have moved on to tracking even closer
encounters, such as asteroid 1999 AN10, a half-mile (800-meter) wide
rock predicted to pass only 236,000 miles (380,000 km) from Earth,
or slightly less than the distance to the Moon, in 2027.
(Reporting by Tom James in Seattle; Editing by Patrick Enright and
Sandra Maler)
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