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Asteroid 2012 DA14 set for record-breaking Earth pass | Asteroid 2012 DA14 set for record-breaking Earth pass |
(about 2 hours later) | |
By Jason Palmer Science and technology reporter, BBC News | By Jason Palmer Science and technology reporter, BBC News |
An asteroid as large as an Olympic swimming pool will race past the Earth on Friday at a distance of just 27,700km (17,200mi) - the closest ever predicted for an object of that size. | An asteroid as large as an Olympic swimming pool will race past the Earth on Friday at a distance of just 27,700km (17,200mi) - the closest ever predicted for an object of that size. |
It will pass closer even than the geosynchronous satellites that orbit the Earth, but there is no risk of impacts or collisions. | It will pass closer even than the geosynchronous satellites that orbit the Earth, but there is no risk of impacts or collisions. |
Its closest approach will be 19:25 GMT. | Its closest approach will be 19:25 GMT. |
For regions in darkness around that time, it will be visible using good binoculars or a telescope. | For regions in darkness around that time, it will be visible using good binoculars or a telescope. |
The asteroid's arrival was preceded by a damaging meteor event in Russia on Friday - but indications from the meteor's path suggest that the two events are entirely unrelated - just a "cosmic coincidence", as Alan Fitzsimmons of Queens University Belfast told BBC News. | |
The asteroid orbits the Sun in 368 days - a period similar to Earth's year - but it does not orbit in the same plane as the Earth. | The asteroid orbits the Sun in 368 days - a period similar to Earth's year - but it does not orbit in the same plane as the Earth. |
As it passes - at 7.8km/s (17,450 mi/hr) - it will come from "under" the Earth and return back toward the Sun from "above". | As it passes - at 7.8km/s (17,450 mi/hr) - it will come from "under" the Earth and return back toward the Sun from "above". |
It will pass over directly over the eastern Indian Ocean, making for the best viewing in Eastern Europe, Asia and Australia. | It will pass over directly over the eastern Indian Ocean, making for the best viewing in Eastern Europe, Asia and Australia. |
But keen viewers anywhere can find one of several live streams of the event on the internet, including a feed from the Jet Propulsion Laboratory at Nasa, available from 19:00 GMT. | But keen viewers anywhere can find one of several live streams of the event on the internet, including a feed from the Jet Propulsion Laboratory at Nasa, available from 19:00 GMT. |
2012 DA14 was first spotted in February 2012 by astronomers at the La Sagra Sky Survey in Spain - once a fairly small-scale, amateur effort to discover and track asteroids that has in recent years become a significant contributor to our knowledge of these "near-Earth objects". | 2012 DA14 was first spotted in February 2012 by astronomers at the La Sagra Sky Survey in Spain - once a fairly small-scale, amateur effort to discover and track asteroids that has in recent years become a significant contributor to our knowledge of these "near-Earth objects". |
They caught sight of the asteroid after its last pass, at a far greater distance. | They caught sight of the asteroid after its last pass, at a far greater distance. |
From their observations, they were able to calculate the asteroid's future and past paths and predict Friday's near-miss - which will be the closest the object comes for at least 30 years. | From their observations, they were able to calculate the asteroid's future and past paths and predict Friday's near-miss - which will be the closest the object comes for at least 30 years. |
Prof Fitzsimmons said that it is a scientific opportunity not to be missed. | Prof Fitzsimmons said that it is a scientific opportunity not to be missed. |
"When asteroids come this close, it's very important to try to learn about them - it's become so bright, so it's so easy to study," he told BBC News. | "When asteroids come this close, it's very important to try to learn about them - it's become so bright, so it's so easy to study," he told BBC News. |
"We get an additional insight into these small objects, which are the most likely impactors on Earth." | "We get an additional insight into these small objects, which are the most likely impactors on Earth." |
The notion that it is these smaller, tens-to-hundreds of metres-sized objects that pose the greatest potential threat to Earth is explored in the BBC feature article Can we know about every asteroid? . | The notion that it is these smaller, tens-to-hundreds of metres-sized objects that pose the greatest potential threat to Earth is explored in the BBC feature article Can we know about every asteroid? . |
For skywatchers in the UK, the graphic below indicates roughly where in the northern sky to try to spot 2012 DA14. | For skywatchers in the UK, the graphic below indicates roughly where in the northern sky to try to spot 2012 DA14. |