The large near-Earth object is well known to astronomers and will get no closer than 3.9 million miles to our planet.
A large near-Earth asteroid will safely pass by our planet
on Wednesday morning, providing astronomers with an exceptional opportunity to
study the 1.5-mile-wide (2-kilometer-wide) object in great detail.
The asteroid, called 1998 OR2, will make its closest
approach at 5:55 a.m. EDT (2:55 a.m. PDT). While this is known as a "close
approach" by astronomers, it's still very far away: The asteroid will get
no closer than about 3.9 million miles (6.3 million kilometers), passing more
than 16 times farther away than the Moon.
Asteroid 1998 OR2 was discovered by the Near-Earth Asteroid
Tracking program at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in July 1998, and for the
past two decades astronomers have tracked it. As a result, we understand its
orbital trajectory very precisely, and we can say with confidence that this
asteroid poses no possibility of impact for at least the next 200 years. Its
next close approach to Earth will occur in 2079, when it will pass by closer -
only about four times the lunar distance.
Despite this, 1998 OR2 is still categorized as a large
"potentially hazardous asteroid" because, over the course of
millennia, very slight changes in the asteroid's orbit may cause it to present
more of a hazard to Earth than it does now. This is one of the reasons why
tracking this asteroid during its close approach - using telescopes and especially
ground-based radar - is important,
as observations such as these will enable an even better long-term assessment
of the hazard presented by this asteroid.
Close approaches by large asteroids like 1998 OR2 are quite
rare. The previous close approach by a large asteroid was made by asteroid
Florence in September 2017. That 3-mile-wide (5-kilometer-wide) object zoomed
past Earth at 18 lunar distances. On average, we expect asteroids of this size
to fly by our planet this close roughly once every five years.
Since they are bigger, asteroids of this size reflect much
more light than smaller asteroids and are therefore easier to detect with
telescopes. Almost all near-Earth asteroids (about 98%) of the size of 1998 OR2
or larger have already been discovered, tracked and cataloged. It is extremely
unlikely there could be an impact over the next century by one of these large
asteroids, but efforts to discover all asteroids that could pose an impact
hazard to Earth continue.
Source by NASA
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