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  1. #1
    te_lanus's Avatar
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    Default Huge Asteroid to Pass Near Earth in November 8th

    Mark your calendars for an impressive and upcoming flyby of an asteroid that’s one of the larger potentially perilous space rocks in the heavens – in terms of smacking the Earth in the future.
    It’s the case of asteroid 2005 YU55, a round mini-world that is about 1,300 feet (400 meters) in diameter. In early November, this asteroid will approach Earth within a scant 0.85 lunar distances.
    Due the object’s size and whisking by so close to Earth, an extensive campaign of radar, visual and infrared observations are being planned.

    Asteroid 2005 YU55 was discovered by Spacewatch at the University of Arizona, Tucson’s Lunar and Planetary Laboratory on Dec. 28, 2005. [Photos: Asteroids in Deep Space]
    En route and headed our way, the cosmic wanderer is another reminder about life here on our sitting duck of a planet

    Close and big
    “The close Earth approach of 2005 YU55 on Nov. 8, is unusual since it is close and big. On average, one wouldn’t expect an object this big to pass this close but every 30 years,” said Don Yeomans, manager of NASA’s Near-Earth Object Program Office and the Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif.

    Yeomans said that with new radar capabilities at Goldstone in California — part of NASA’s Deep Space Network — there is a good chance of obtaining radar imaging of 2005 YU55 down to the 5-meter resolution level. Doing so, he said, would mean obtaining higher spatial resolution of the object than that attained by recent spacecraft flyby missions.
    “So we like to think of this opportunity as a close flyby mission with Earth as the spacecraft,” Yeomans told SPACE.com. “When combined with ground-based optical and near-infrared observations, the radar data should provide a fairly complete picture of one of the larger potentially hazardous asteroids,” he said. [5 Reasons to Care About Asteroids]
    Asteroid 2005 YU55 is a slow rotator. Because of its size and proximity to Earth, the Minor Planet Center in Cambridge, Mass., has designated the space rock as a “potentially hazardous asteroid.”

    Dishing it out
    “We’re already preparing for the 2005 YU55 flyby,” said Lance Benner, a research scientist at JPL and a specialist on radar imaging of near-Earth objects. He said part of the plan is to observe the asteroid with radar using both the huge Arecibo dish in Puerto Rico and equipment at Goldstone.

    “The asteroid will approach from the south, so Goldstone has the first chance to observe it due to its declination coverage,” Benner told SPACE.com.

    To help coordinate the observing campaigns, “Radar Observations Planning” websites have been set up for this unusual occasion, Benner said.

    “This flyby will be the closest by any near-Earth asteroid with an absolute magnitude this bright since 1976 and until 2028,” Benner added. “Having said that, nobody saw 2010 XC15 during its close flyby within 0.5 lunar distance in 1976,” he said, noting that this asteroid wasn’t discovered until late in 2010.

    “Thus, the flyby by 2005 YU55 will be the closest actually observed by something this large, so it represents a unique opportunity,” Benner said. “In a real sense, this will provide imaging resolution comparable to or even better than a spacecraft mission flyby.”

    Radar paint
    Benner said that because the asteroid is zooming by Earth so very close, radar echoes will be extremely strong. One facility at Goldstone will be used to transmit and “radar paint” the object…another Goldstone dish is on tap to snag the reflected echo of radar data.

    What can radar do?

    Information collected by this technique, for example, can be transformed into 3-D shapes, with surface features and spin rates identified. The asteroid’s roughness and density can also be assessed. Furthermore, radar can improve the whereabouts of the object. By greatly shrinking uncertainties for newly discovered meandering NEOs, that in turn enables motion prediction for decades to centuries.

    As for seeing the asteroid with small telescopes, start getting your gear ready.

    Initially, the object will be too close to the sun and too faint for optical observers.

    But late in the day (Universal Time) on Nov. 8, the solar elongation will grow sufficiently to see it. Early on Nov. 9, the asteroid could reach about 11th magnitude for several hours before it fades as its distance rapidly increases, Benner explained.
    Source:Huge Asteroid 2005 YU55 to Pass Near Earth in November| Near-Earth Asteroids | Space.com


    Anybody here for a quick end times prophecy about this?
    "Invisible Pink Unicorns are beings of great spiritual power. We know this because they are capable of being invisible and pink at the same time. Like all religions, the Faith of the Invisible Pink Unicorns is based upon both logic and faith. We have faith that they are pink; we logically know that they are invisible because we can't see them." — Steve Eley

  2. #2
    armageddongirl's Avatar
    armageddongirl is offline Lost in time.....
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    The power of imagination makes us infinite

  3. #3
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    Thumbs up

    Quote Originally Posted by armageddongirl View Post

    it must be the "draconia" mother-ship!

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    JPL Small-Body Database Browser

    Search the above for 2005 YU55.

    Asteroid 2005 YU55 to Approach Earth on November 8, 2011

    I'm sure some people will try to make some crazy Armageddon predictions but YU55 is nothing to worry about.

  5. #5
    Xeno's Avatar
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    That is pretty close still... Lol, few days earlier and it would've smacked into the moon following that simulation.
    400 meters is pretty large, however, on the link unknown posted, it shows the view from another angle too, since 2d doesn't quite do justice on how close it isn't.


  6. #6
    anthem's Avatar
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    but YU55 is nothing to worry about.
    Are you sure? Are they sure?






  7. #7
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    Well there you go.. its 'nothing' to worry about.....we just had a 70ft asteroid fly by between the orbits of Earth and the Moon and Space Command never knew it was there.... so 'this' one is a planet killer ?? Well city killer at least.... can't wait for it to get here.... is the Nuclear interceptor sheild working now ? It really gives one the warm glowing feeling that between us and it there is .... nothing.... grab some booze and the deckchair and sunnies and ear plugs.... the light and sound show is about to begin
    Last edited by August; 04-06-2011 at 06:26 PM.

  8. #8
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    Definitely not a planet killer at that size.

    This baby is 1,300 feet... Definite city annihilator...
    I'll just find some calculator, brb...
    Last edited by Xeno; 04-06-2011 at 06:29 PM.


  9. #9
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    Quote Originally Posted by Xeno View Post
    Definitely not a planet killer at that size.
    And, it isn't really between the moon and the earth... It just looks like that on a flat, 2d Image. The thing doesn't actually lie in the Elliptic like that.

    This baby is 1,300 feet... Definite city annihilator...
    Well that just makes me feel so much better knowing that fact.... they say the 'big' one coming is hundreds of years away so we can all go play.... we are now safe.... its assuring to know that our planet is protected by the asteroid repelling sheild.....

  10. #10
    Xeno's Avatar
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    This one was initially given a level 1 on this scale, it's threat level was downgraded to a 0.
    Torino Scale - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

    Level 1 is still, without danger of impact.
    This thing was never thought to possibly hit us.

    The biggest threat was rated as Apophis in that... more recent observations have lowered that to a zero... No chance of impact.

    Btw... Level 10 means we're fucked, under that system.
    Last edited by Xeno; 04-06-2011 at 06:36 PM.



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