Large Asteroid to Brush By Earth This Fall
Posted on: Monday, 3 May 2004, 06:00 CDT
U.S. astronomers said an asteroid the size of a small city will pass near the Earth on Sept. 29, in the closest approach of a large space rock this century.
The asteroid, called Toutatis, follows a four-year orbit around the sun that takes it near Earth periodically, SPACE.com reported Monday. The Web site said an Internet rumor has arisen that the asteroid will strike Earth this fall -- a prospect that astronomers say is untrue.
Toutatis is a dumbbell-shaped asteroid nearly 3 miles long and about 1.5 miles wide. This fall, it will pass within about 1 million miles of Earth -- about four times the distance to the moon.
Astronomers from NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory said the orbit of Toutatis is known with better precision than any other large asteroid known to cross Earth's orbit. Toutatis has not been so near since the year 1353 and will not approach this closely again until 2562, NASA's astronomers have calculated.
No other asteroid so large is known to have come so close in the past, though accurate tracking of space rocks is a fairly recent, high-tech skill that still leaves wide margins of error for many objects, they said.
Related Articles
- Russia To Keep Space Station Components In Orbit
- NASA To Air Earth Views From Space
- Eileen Borgeson's Art Recognizes Accomplishments and Contributions on Earth and in Space
- E Frontier Announces 3D Earth Model and Space Shuttle for Educators, Students and Science Enthusiasts
- European Space Probe Reaches Venus Orbit
- Z Fires Objects Faster than Earth Moves Through Space
- After Seven Years and Two Billion Miles, Probe Draws Near to Titan
- China Promises to Send Woman in Space but Not in the Near Future:Official
- Guarding Earth from Deadly Space Objects
- Is a 2nd Earth out there? ; Jupiter-like planet found orbiting star resembling our sun
User Comments (1)
| 1. |
Posted by Dryden on 03/03/2009, 17:18 Happened Today March Third Two Thousand And Nine ( Square Root Day ) (3x3=9) (March (03) Third (03) Two Thousand And Nine (09) |

RSS Feeds