Monday, March 2, 2009

Small Asteroid Buzzes Earth



ASTEROID FLYBY:

There's no danger of a collision, but newly-discovered asteroid 2009 DD45 will come close enough today when it flies by our planet 72,000 km (0.00048 AU) away. That's only twice the height of a geostationary communications satellite. The asteroid measures 30 to 40 meters across, similar in size to the Tunguska impactor of 1908. Closest approach occurs at approximately 1340 UT (5:40 am PST) on March 2nd. Experienced amateur astronomers may be able to photograph the space rock shining like an 11th magnitude star as it races through the constellations Hydra and Virgo. The timing favors observers in Hawaii, Australia, New Zealand, Japan and east Asia. Visit SpaceWeather for updates and ephemerids.

I hope someone reading this will be able to have good seeing and take some fantastic pictures.

And remember: Keep Watching the Skies!

2 comments:

SnoopyTheGoon said...

Long as it doesn't plop in my garden...

TexasFred said...

Wonderful, *Death from above* is a distinct possibility...