Asteroid 2004 BL86 zips safely past Earth - Action News
Home WebMail Sunday, November 24, 2024, 01:57 AM | Calgary | -12.2°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Science

Asteroid 2004 BL86 zips safely past Earth

A huge asteroid that you may be able to spot tonight has its own moon, NASA says.

Point your telescope or binoculars near Jupiter tonight

Approach of Asteroid 2004 BL86

10 years ago
Duration 2:27
Dr. Lance Benner, principal investigator for Goldstone Solar System Radar, shows image taken Sunday night via Goldstone

A huge asteroidflewpast the Earth today, and is expected to be visible from Canada with strong binoculars or a small telescope tonight.

Based on its brightness, asteroid 2004 BL86wasestimated to be about 500 metres across. But NASA scientists later revised their estimate to about 300 metres, based on radar measurements. If it were sitting on Earth beside Toronto's CN tower, its top would be a little lower than therevolving restaurant.

The asteroid is about 300 metres across - here's how its size compares to the CN Tower and a cruise ship. (Earl Cabuhat/CBC)

They also revealed Monday morning that the space rock has a very short "day" it rotates once every 2.6 hours and is orbited by its own tiny moon.

The asteroid'smoon, along with features that may be boulders on the rotating asteroid, could be seen in a video of the radar images shown by NASA research scientist Lance Benner on a live webcastduring the space rock's close approach Monday morning. The event was broadcastby Slooh, a groupthat streams celestial events online from telescopes around the world.

At its closest approach at 11:19 a.m., the huge space rock was aboutabout 1.2-million kilometresfrom the Earth, or about three times further away than the Earth's moon.

Asteroid orbit

10 years ago
Duration 0:06
Asteroid orbit

That's a safe distance, but closer than any other asteroid this big will come until 2027 the year when we can expect a visit from another chunky rock called 1999 AN10.

Viewing tips

You may be able to see the asteroid this evening using strong binoculars or a small telescope, NASA says.

It will probably be easiest to find around 11 p.m. ET when it will be to the right of the planet Jupiter,between the constellations Leo and Gemini, highin the eastern sky.

"Jupiter is the brightest star-like object in the sky these days. You can't miss it," said J. Randy Attwood, executive director of the Royal Astronomical Society of Canada. "And the asteroid will be really close to Jupiter."

He recommends that you:

  • Finda dark back yard or park where you can block out as much light as possible.
  • Pointyour telescope toward the east with Jupiter within view, taking care that the field of view is wide enough for you to see both Jupiter and the asteroid.
  • Make a diagram of what you see and check back later to see if anything moved.

Attwood said this is a rare opportunity because it's not often that celestial objects are moving fast enough for us to notice their motion planets plod along so slowly that their motion against the stars is only visible on the scale of days or weeks.

In this case, the asteroid will move the width of four full moons in an hour,not that quickly.

"You may not see it moving," Attwoodsaid.

You may not recognize the asteroid the first time you look, but it should be obvious the second time, when it will be in a different place.

He says there's great satisfaction that comes withspotting an object like this yourself.

"To think this is something half a kilometre in size, 1.2 million kilometres away and you're seeing it from your backyardthat's exciting."

NASA will also be watching the asteroid, capturing radar images and datausing its Deep Space Network antenna at Goldstone, Calif. NASAArecibo Observatory in Puerto Rico will also be following it over the next few days.

Benner said this will be the best asteroid of the year to observe by radar.

"The big night is tonight," he added.

The asteroid was detected in 2004 and will not come this close to Earth for at least 200 years, NASA says.

On mobile and can't see the video replay below? Watch it here.