Astronomy:2004 FU162

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Short description: Closest known Earth approach until 2008


2004 FU162
Designations
2004 FU162
Minor planet categoryAten · NEO[1][2]
Orbital characteristics[1]
Epoch 5 April 2004 (JD 2453100.5)
Uncertainty parameter 9
Observation arc44 minutes[2][lower-alpha 1]
(only 4 observations)
|{{{apsis}}}|helion}}1.1511 AU
|{{{apsis}}}|helion}}0.5026 AU
0.8269 AU
Eccentricity0.3922
Orbital period0.75 yr (275 days)
Mean anomaly262.67°
Mean motion1° 18m 39.24s / day
Inclination4.1647°
Longitude of ascending node191.25°
139.78°
Earth MOID0.0001 AU
Physical characteristics
Dimensions4–12 meters (estimated)
Absolute magnitude (H)28.7[1]


2004 FU162 is an Aten near-Earth asteroid less than 20 meters in diameter crudely estimated to have passed roughly 6500 km above the surface of Earth[lower-alpha 2] on 31 March 2004.

It was only observed for 44 minutes on 31 March 2004,[lower-alpha 1] by the Lincoln Near-Earth Asteroid Research (LINEAR) team at Lincoln Laboratory's Experimental Test Site in Socorro, New Mexico, and remains a lost asteroid.[2] The estimated 4 to 6 meter sized body made one of the closest known approaches to Earth.

Description

On 31 March 2004, around 15:35 UTC, the asteroid is crudely estimated to have passed within approximately 1 Earth radius (R) or 6,400 kilometers of the surface of the Earth (or 2.02 R from Earth's center). But due to the very short observation arc, the uncertainty in the close approach distance is a large ±15000 km. By comparison, geostationary satellites orbit at 5.6 R and GPS satellites orbit at 3.17 R from the center of the Earth.

(As of 2008) this was the third or fourth closest approach. The first observation of 2004 FU162 was not announced until 22 August 2004.

It was only observed four times in the space of 44 minutes and could not be followed up. Nevertheless, "the orbit is quite determinate and, given the exceptional nature of this close approach, the object is now receiving a designation".[3] No precovery images have been found.

2004 FU162 is estimated to be approximately 6 meters in diameter. This means that it would burn up from atmospheric friction before striking the ground in the case of an Earth impact.

On 26 March 2010, it may have come within 0.0825 AU (12.3 million km) of Earth,[4] but with an uncertainty parameter of 9,[1] the orbit is poorly determined.

Another, larger near-Earth asteroid, 2004 FH passed just two weeks prior to 2004 FU162.

A closer non-impacting approach to Earth was not known until 2008 TS26 on 9 October 2008.

See also

Notes

  1. 1.0 1.1 Observation arc: (31.30799 – 31.27744) * 24 hours * 60 minutes = 43.99 minutes
  2. The asteroid passed about 12913±15000 km from the center of Earth and Earth has a radius of 6371 km.

References

External links