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Judi Lynn

(160,450 posts)
Sat Mar 3, 2018, 12:19 AM Mar 2018

How to watch the asteroid thats about to get closer to Earth than the moon

How to watch the asteroid that’s about to get closer to Earth than the moon



Katherine Ellen Foley
March 01, 2018

Another day, another close encounter with a flying space rock.

Starting around 12:30 am eastern time on Friday, March 2, asteroid 2018 DV1 will be visible as a tiny dot of light whizzing by the Earth. The asteroid, which is about 23 feet across (about as wide as an orca is long), will come as close as 70,000 miles (113,000 km) to Earth. For context, the moon is more than three times that distance from Earth, circling the planet about 238,900 miles away.

Astronomers at Mount Lemmon Observatory in Arizona spotted 2018 DV1 earlier this week. Coincidentally, its appearance will come less than a week after DU2018 zoomed past Earth about 175,000 miles away.

Asteroids are fairly common, and generally innocuous. Technically, 2018 DV1 is classified as “potentially dangerous,” but NASA uses that term rather liberally: Anything that is more than 492 feet wide and occupies an orbit that approaches within 4.6 million miles of our planet. To date, there have been 17,774 “near-Earth” asteroids recorded, and none of them have given us much trouble. The record, though, only goes back to 1900, and so doesn’t include the asteroid that struck Earth some 66 million years ago, and sped up the extinction of dinosaurs.

More:
https://qz.com/1219484/scientists-just-found-the-168th-species-of-japanese-tardigrade-in-a-mossy-parking-lot/

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How to watch the asteroid thats about to get closer to Earth than the moon (Original Post) Judi Lynn Mar 2018 OP
Asteroids closer than the moon's orbit defacto7 Mar 2018 #1
Is one of them named Margielago?? Angry Dragon Mar 2018 #2
I dont ask their names. Am I antiastrosocial? or simply rude? defacto7 Mar 2018 #3
The link is to an article about a Japanese tardigrade - ? csziggy Mar 2018 #4

defacto7

(13,485 posts)
1. Asteroids closer than the moon's orbit
Sat Mar 3, 2018, 12:34 AM
Mar 2018

aren't uncommon. Spaceweather.com has a nice graphic of all the incoming asteroids we know of. There was one a couple months ago that was .04 lunar distances that whizzed by. There are also about 1882 potentially hazardous asteroids we keep an eye on. And there are always new ones coming by we never saw coming until they've passed. Usually they come from around the sun where we can't see their approach.

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