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Type: Document
Date/Time: 2021-04-01 12:42 UTC

Type: Document
Date/Time: 2019-12-20 09:31 UTC

Type: Document
Date/Time: 2020-07-03 07:51 UTC
Type: Document
Date/Time: 2022-02-14 07:12 UTC
Type: Document
Date/Time: 2020-07-03 07:33 UTC
Type: Document
Date/Time: 2020-06-25 11:25 UTC
Type: Document
Date/Time: 2019-07-31 13:24 UTC

On 25 April 2018 ESA’s Gaia Data Processing and Analysis Consortium published the second release of the mission data products (known as Data Release 2, or DR2 for short). For the first time, Gaia astrometry of more than 14 000 known asteroids was made public, showing that the spacecraft can achieve astrometric precisions at the milliarcsecond level.

Type: Document
Date/Time: 2022-04-05 14:49 UTC

April 2022 Newsletter

Type: Document
Date/Time: 2019-08-02 15:39 UTC

Two large objects have been observed in the month ofJuly. (85989) 1999 JD6 had a distant encounter with the Earth, while the newly discovered asteroid 2015 OL35 entered our priority list for follow-up observations.

Type: Document
Date/Time: 2019-08-02 15:31 UTC

During the month of September a news circulated on European media claiming that between 22 and 28 September the Earth would have been hit by meteorites and other cataclysmic events.

Type: Document
Date/Time: 2019-08-02 15:41 UTC

Some media attention was given to the distant fly-by of asteroid (1566) Icarus. Although the event in itself posed no collision threat whatsoever,Icarus is indeed an interesting object for the history of NEOs.

Type: Document
Date/Time: 2023-01-05 12:17 UTC

January 2023 Newsletter

Type: Document
Date/Time: 2019-08-02 11:02 UTC

The newly discovered asteroid (469219) 2016 HO3 has been attracting the interest of the NEO community becauseof its peculiar orbital path. Having the same period of revolution of the Earth but a higher eccentricity and being properly phased, this object appears to circle our planet in a retrograde “quasi-satellite” orbit with period one year.

Type: Document
Date/Time: 2019-08-02 11:05 UTC

On 9 May the planet Mercury will transit the Sun as seen from Earth. Although not an asteroid event, this gives us a chance to talk about how transits have been used in the past to probe the population of small asteroids extremely close to the Sun (the so-called Vulcanoids).

Type: Document
Date/Time: 2019-07-31 14:53 UTC

During 2015-2016 ESA funded the development of two small robotic observatories, called the Test-Bed Telescopes (TBTs). The main goal is to develop and test a fully automated telescope control system to observe NEOs and space debris.

Type: Document
Date/Time: 2019-07-31 13:21 UTC

Current NEO statistics About 4% of the known NEO population is in the risk list. This value has remained roughly constant over the past years even if the discovery rate has increased.

Type: Document
Date/Time: 2019-07-31 14:48 UTC

The closest approach distance is not the only important parameter for assessing the asteroid hazard. The velocity plays a crucial role in shaping the outcome of a close encounter as well as in evaluating the consequences of an impact. The speed at which an asteroid flies by the Earth results from geometrical and dynamical considerations characterizing its pre-encounter orbit.

Type: Document
Date/Time: 2021-11-05 13:47 UTC

November 2021 Newsletter

Type: Document
Date/Time: 2019-07-31 14:50 UTC

During the past year ESA funded the refurbishment and modernization of the 0.8 m Schmidt reflector located at the Calar Alto Observatory in Spain. The telescope, identified with the MPC code Z84,is now operational and can be remotely controlled.

Type: Document
Date/Time: 2019-07-31 13:30 UTC

For the first time in the history of NEA observations more than 2 000 new NEAs have been discovered in one calendar year, resulting in a monthly average of nearly 170 new asteroids. In addition, 2017 was the fifth year in a row with NEA discoveries above a thousand.

Type: Document
Date/Time: 2019-08-02 15:47 UTC

On 25 March 2015 our website experienced unusually high traffic for a few hours, seven times above our average rate. We tracked this boost of popularity to some news about the flyby of asteroid 2014 YB35 that were circulating on the web around that time.

Type: Document
Date/Time: 2022-09-05 14:00 UTC

September 2022 Newsletter

Type: Document
Date/Time: 2019-07-31 14:40 UTC

Near-Earth asteroid 3122 Florence will have a close pass by Earth on1 September when it will be at a closest distance of 0.0472 au (18.4 LD), which makes it a Potentially Hazardous Asteroid (PHA). This Amor object, named after nurse Florence Nightingale (1820-1910), has an estimated diameter of ~4.35 km and was discovered in March 1981 by S.J. Bus at Siding Spring Observatory.

Type: Document
Date/Time: 2019-08-02 11:07 UTC

We took the opportunity of the ExoMars 2016 launch to organize a ground-based observational campaign. The goal was to test, in a reverse mode, the observational scenario needed to monitor the approach of a small Earth impactor. The spacecraft and other hardware related to the launch was successfully imaged;

Type: Document
Date/Time: 2019-08-02 11:09 UTC

This month, while reading this newsletter, you will find an object designated with a “non-standard” name: XDg2F93. Labels like this, not following the standard form of year + letters + numbers,are called “temporary designations”.

Type: Document
Date/Time: 2019-08-02 15:34 UTC

September 2015 Newsletter

Type: Document
Date/Time: 2019-07-31 15:20 UTC

Whenever a new set of observations for an object is published, our Impact Monitoring routines perform a new search for possibly impacting orbits compatible with such set of observations. The system is capable of detecting all possibly impacting orbits down to an impact probability threshold, named “generic completeness level”.

Type: Document
Date/Time: 2019-07-31 14:39 UTC

Asteroid 2012 TC4, discovered five years ago by the Pan-STARRS survey,will come back close to Earth on 12 October 2077.It will fly-by at 44 000 km from the surface, providing a rare chance to carefully observe a small known object during its entire approach to our planet.

Type: Document
Date/Time: 2019-07-31 14:33 UTC

Current NEO statistics During the last month the global numbered asteroid catalogue (including main belt asteroid) surpassed the threshold of half million objects. The number of known NEOs surpassed 17 000, thanks to more than 300 discoveries in a single month.

Type: Document
Date/Time: 2021-12-03 14:09 UTC

December 2021 Newsletter

Type: Document
Date/Time: 2019-07-31 14:29 UTC

The Spacewatch project, located in Arizona, is probably the oldest of the asteroid survey still active today. They were the dominant discoverers of new asteroids in the ‘gos, and the pioneers of using CCDs to find new NEOs.

Type: Document
Date/Time: 2020-08-05 09:12 UTC

August 2020 Newsletter

Type: Document
Date/Time: 2019-07-31 10:57 UTC

On 22 June 2019, around 21:26 UT (17:26 local time), a roughly 5-metre object entered the atmosphere over the Caribbean Sea, and exploded at an altitude of about 25 km over the sea surface, releasing an energy roughly equivalent to 3 kt of TNT. The explosion was first detected by the Geostationary Lightning Mapper (GLM) instrument on board the GOES-16 geostationary satellite.

Type: Document
Date/Time: 2019-07-31 11:02 UTC

May will likely be the last month before summer with an average rate of NEO discoveries. Starting in June, most surveys in the South-West of the United States will likely temporarily decrease their productivity due to the summer monsoon season.

Type: Document
Date/Time: 2019-07-31 13:20 UTC

In October 2017 the Pan-STARRS survey discovered the first known interstellar object transiting through our Solar System. Named ‘Oumuamua by the discoverers, it soon became the focus of numerous observations by the world's largest professional telescopes.

Type: Document
Date/Time: 2020-09-04 08:19 UTC

September 2020 Newsletter

Type: Document
Date/Time: 2020-01-21 13:39 UTC

Type: Document
Date/Time: 2019-07-31 11:08 UTC

The first edition of the Planetary Defense Conference (PDC) managed by the International Academy of Astronautics happened exactly 10 years ago,in the week of 27-30 April 2009 (before the IAA became involved, there were two other PDCs, both in the USA). The conference was held in Granada, Spain, and was the first of a biennial IAA series that is continuing this month, with the 6th conference being held in College Park, USA.

Type: Document
Date/Time: 2019-07-31 13:18 UTC

On 27 June 2018, after a cruise phase of 3.5 years, the Japanese Hayabusa 2 spacecraft rendezvoused with its target, near-Earth asteroid (162173) Ryugu. The first images sent back by the mission's cameras show a nearly spherical object, much more symmetric

Type: Document
Date/Time: 2019-07-31 12:14 UTC

For the first time since 2012 the year that just ended did not break all records of annual NEO discoveries. This was mostly due to unusually poor weather in Hawaii, where many current NEO discovery surveys are located.