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Type: Web Content Article
Date/Time: 2020-07-09 15:47 UTC

Last update: 2020-12-04 10:00 UTC On this page, the NEOCC provides problems (we call them 'riddles') related to the observation of NEOs, their dynamics and their characterisation. In irregular...

Type: Web Content Article
Date/Time: 2019-09-09 06:56 UTC

It is possible to visualise the orbits of all asteroids in our database by entering their name, provisional designation or catalogue number. The position along the orbit is computed at regular time...

Type: Web Content Article
Date/Time: 2019-06-05 09:00 UTC

Asteroid and Comet Trajectory Propagator (NEOPROP) In 2012, Astos Solutions developed for ESA a new orbital propagator algorithm in order to assess the potential risk of impact of an NEO. The...

Type: Web Content Article
Date/Time: 2019-08-13 12:42 UTC

The first part of the Discovery Statistics page

Type: Web Content Article
Date/Time: 2019-06-04 14:05 UTC

It is widely acknowledged that NEO science is intriguing and often goes against common sense. A clear understanding of the meaning and importance of any text concerning near-Earth objects, their...

Type: Web Content Article
Date/Time: 2019-08-08 09:27 UTC

The word NEO stands for near-Earth object, indicating a small body of the Solar System which can come into the Earth’s neighbourhood. A broad classification of NEOs distinguishes NECs (near-Earth...

Type: Web Content Article
Date/Time: 2019-08-08 09:28 UTC

Even if an asteroid misses the Earth, it can come back and hit our planet in a subsequent "return". Whether this happens or not, depends on whether the object passes through well-defined regions in...

Type: Web Content Article
Date/Time: 2019-08-08 09:29 UTC

The first NEA, (433) Eros, was discovered by Gustav Witt from the Urania Sternwarte Berlin and independently by Auguste Charlois from the Observatoire de Nice, on 13 August 1898. The discovery...