Thursday, June 14, 2012

City Block Size Asteroid Comes Near-Earth To Oblate Spheroid

The asteroid, which is 10 times the size of an Olympic swimming pool, is one of 9,000 "near-Earth objects" recorded by Nasa. It will not be visible to the naked eye but stargazers can watch a live broadcast and catch a glimpse of it passing by Earth online. Named LZ1, the asteroid is 500m (1,650ft) wide and is likely to get only within 14 times the moon's distance from Earth. Image Credit: The Telegraph


City Block Size Asteroid Comes Near-Earth To Oblate Spheroid

An asteroid the size of a city block discovered by astronomers in Canberra will zoom past Earth but poses no risk of a collision.

The "unusually large" asteroid will not be visible to the naked eye but asteroid enthusiasts may watch it pass by during a live online broadcast, said Patrick Paolucci, president of the skywatchers' site, Slooh.

NASA has already cataloged 9000 such Near-Earth Objects, but astronomers are always on the lookout for new ones.

"Once in awhile one will come out of nowhere like this one, which is actually pretty big," Paolucci told AFP.

"We were like, 'Wow, we should track this one."'

The asteroid, named 2012 LZ1, is thought to be about 500 metres wide, and is expected to pass within 14 times the Moon's distance from the Earth.

The massive object was discovered just days ago by Scottish-Australian astronomer Rob McNaught and colleagues at the Research School of Astronomy and Astrophysics of the Australian National University.

The asteroid qualifies as a Near-Earth Object because of its size and proximity - more than 152 metres wide and within a distance of 7.5 million kilometres from Earth.

Paolucci said the asteroid's fly-by would be covered in real-time with footage from an observatory in the Canary Islands at Slooh.com beginning at 10am (AEST) on Friday.
[Reference Here]