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Type: Document
Date/Time: 2021-02-02 07:25 UTC

Type: Document
Date/Time: 2020-11-02 07:21 UTC

Type: Web Content Article
Date/Time: 2023-09-28 09:59 UTC

Our search engine provides a comprehensive exploration of the entire asteroid database, offering a wide range of filtering options based on object group, risk class, orbital parameters,...

Type: Web Content Article
Date/Time: 2023-09-28 09:58 UTC

Orbit Properties This page contains information about orbital properties of the object, as computed by the Aegis Orbit Determination and Impact Monitoring system. Orbital elements at a refence...

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

Type: Document
Date/Time: 2021-08-02 11:20 UTC

Type: Document
Date/Time: 2021-09-01 06:05 UTC

Type: Web Content Article
Date/Time: 2020-08-05 09:29 UTC

The ESA NEO Coordination Centre has released the January newsletter.

Type: Document
Date/Time: 2021-05-03 06:09 UTC

Type: Web Content Article
Date/Time: 2024-12-06 16:33 UTC

Summary 2024 XA1 was the eleventh asteroid discovered on an impact trajectory, and the fourth one in 2024. It was found by the Catalina Sky Survey team observing from Kitt Peak, Arizona. It...

Type: Document
Date/Time: 2023-03-06 16:32 UTC

March 2023 Newsletter

Type: Document
Date/Time: 2022-10-05 15:24 UTC

October 2022 Newsletter

Type: Document
Date/Time: 2022-11-04 11:41 UTC

November 2022 Newsletter

Type: Document
Date/Time: 2022-07-05 09:41 UTC

July 2022 Newsletter

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

September 2022 Newsletter

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

December 2021 Newsletter

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

April 2022 Newsletter

Type: Document
Date/Time: 2022-05-06 07:14 UTC

May 2022 Newsletter

Type: Document
Date/Time: 2021-09-07 14:19 UTC

September 2021 Newsletter

Type: Document
Date/Time: 2021-10-05 13:24 UTC

October 2021 Newsletter

Type: Document
Date/Time: 2021-06-07 08:42 UTC

June 2021 Newsletter

Type: Document
Date/Time: 2021-02-05 12:21 UTC

February 2021 Newsletter

Type: Document
Date/Time: 2020-12-04 09:29 UTC

December 2020 Newsletter

Type: Document
Date/Time: 2020-06-25 10:17 UTC

April 2020 Newsletter

Type: Document
Date/Time: 2020-11-05 09:36 UTC

November 2020 Newsletter

Type: Document
Date/Time: 2019-09-09 16:53 UTC

Type: Document
Date/Time: 2019-12-20 09:30 UTC

Type: Document
Date/Time: 2019-12-20 09:25 UTC

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

Type: Document
Date/Time: 2019-07-31 12:22 UTC

On 19 October a very small asteroid, designated as 2018 UA, was discovered by the Catalina Sky Survey, and quickly flagged as a potential very close approacher. Immediate follow-up observations by both Catalina and the Spacewatch project led to a much more accurate orbit solution.

Type: Document
Date/Time: 2019-07-31 13:26 UTC

Over the past few weeks some media outlets discussed the future impact possibilities of asteroid (101955) Bennu, the target of the ongoing NASA mission Osiris-REx. Bennu is indeed ranked near the top of our risk list, but the earliest year when an impact is possible is 2175, not 2135 as some reports stated.

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: 2019-07-31 14:43 UTC

The month of June 2002, 15 years ago, marked the kick-off of six parallel preliminary studies carried out by ESA’s General Studies Programme (GSP) in order to analyse possible asteroid missions. Three of those studies were devoted to in-orbit telescopes for NEO discovery and characterization, other two were devoted to asteroid rendezvous missions and finally one for asteroid rendezvous and impact.

Type: Document
Date/Time: 2019-07-31 14:44 UTC

Just a few days before the edition of the present newsletter a large bolide crossed the Italian northern sky. The event was observed by many people and in particular by a newly installed fireball network PRISMA (see next page). Such images have been used to determine the trajectory of the entering object.

Type: Document
Date/Time: 2019-07-31 14:35 UTC

Asteroid 2012 TC4is the target of an international observing campaign that will culminate this month during its close fly-by with Earth. The object will safely fly at about 44 000 km from the Earth surface, with no chance of collision with our planet.

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 15:42 UTC

In recent years, it has become increasingly common for ground-based surveys to discover small objects that seem to be in distant Earth-centred orbits. Most of them turn out to be man-made spacecraft or upper stages of spent rockets residing in Earth’s region.

Type: Document
Date/Time: 2021-07-01 06:31 UTC

Type: Document
Date/Time: 2021-06-01 12:32 UTC

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: 2024-11-29 14:08 UTC
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: 2019-07-31 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: 2022-03-29 13:50 UTC
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: 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 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: 2019-08-02 15:30 UTC

Over the past few days there has been a significant media interest in 2015 TB145, a large asteroid that flew past Earth on the night of Halloween. Apart for the popularity of the event generated by the date,the fly-by itself is interesting from a scientific perspective, because it was discovered only three weeks before its closest approach.

Type: Document
Date/Time: 2020-07-03 08:30 UTC

July 2020 Newsletter

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: 2021-03-10 07:49 UTC

Type: Document
Date/Time: 2023-02-23 08:41 UTC
Type: Document
Date/Time: 2019-08-02 11:12 UTC

In the month of December, (29075) 1950 DA, an old NEA, entered the risk list in a peculiar way: the addition is not based on new observations but it is the combined result of an already existing good observational coverage for this object, together with a newly implemented dynamical model now available at NEODYS.

Type: Document
Date/Time: 2024-01-24 09:45 UTC
Type: Document
Date/Time: 2020-10-07 06:31 UTC

October 2020 Newsletter

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: 2019-08-02 15:34 UTC

September 2015 Newsletter

Type: Document
Date/Time: 2023-02-28 15:21 UTC
Type: Document
Date/Time: 2024-01-26 10:27 UTC
Type: Document
Date/Time: 2023-01-05 12:17 UTC

January 2023 Newsletter