Small asteroid to pass Earth: NASA
LOS ANGELES, June 25, Xinhua
Near-Earth asteroid 2011 MD will whip past Earth on June 27, but will
not pose any threat, NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) said on
Friday.
The asteroid will pass only 12,000 kilometers (7,500 miles) above the
Earth's surface at about 9:30 EDT, according to JPL in Pasadena, Los
Angeles.
This small asteroid, only 5-20 meters in diameter, is in a very
Earth-like orbit about the Sun, but an orbital analysis indicates there
is no chance it will actually strike Earth on Monday, JPL said.
If a rocky asteroid the size of 2011 MD were to enter Earth's
atmosphere, it would be expected to burn up high in the atmosphere and
cause no damage to Earth's surface, said JPL.
The accompanying diagram gives a view of the asteroid's trajectory
from the general direction of the Sun. This view indicates that 2011 MD
will reach its closest Earth approach point in extreme southern
latitudes (in fact over the southern Atlantic Ocean), according to JPL.
The incoming trajectory leg passes several thousand kilometers outside
the geosynchronous ring of satellites and the outgoing leg passes well
inside the ring, JPL said.
For a brief time, it may be bright enough to be seen even with a
modest-sized telescope.
One would expect an object of this size to come this close to Earth
about every six years on average.
The asteroid was discovered by the LINEAR near-Earth object discovery
team observing from Socorro, New Mexico.
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