2
day notice: Earth gets another close graze by newly discovered
asteroid on March 4
3
March, 2013
A
newly found asteroid will pass just inside the orbit of the Moon,
with its closest approach on March 4, 2013 at 07:35 UTC. Named 2013
EC,
the asteroid is about the size of the space rock that exploded over
Russia two and a half weeks ago, somewhere between 10-17 meters wide
(the Russian meteorite is estimated to be about 15 meters wide when
it entered Earth’s atmosphere). 2013 EC was discovered by the Mt.
Lemmon Observatory in
Arizona on March 2. . There is no chance this asteroid will hit
Earth.
2013
EC will come within 396,000 kilometers from Earth, (246,000 miles, or
around 1.0 lunar distances, 0.0026 AU.
The
Moon’s distance from the Earth varies between 363,104 km (225,622
miles) at perigee (closest) and 406,696 km (252,088 miles) at apogee
(most distant point).
Gianluca
Masi from the Virtual
Telescope Project had
a live view of the asteroid when it was about twice the distance of
the Moon, and a replay of that webcast is available below.
“That
we are finding all these asteroids recently does not mean that we are
being visited by more asteroids,” Masi said during the webcast,
“just that our ability to detect them has gotten so much better.
Our technology has improved a lot over the past decades.”
More info about 2013 EC on the JPL Small Body Database.
More info about 2013 EC on the JPL Small Body Database.
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