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Type: Document
Date/Time: 2024-06-12 12:51 UTC
Type: Document
Date/Time: 2025-01-31 09:11 UTC
Type: Document
Date/Time: 2022-10-05 15:24 UTC

October 2022 Newsletter

Type: Document
Date/Time: 2019-07-31 14:46 UTC

In the acronym "NEO"the final letter O stands for "Object", because the group is generally understood to include both asteroids and comets that come close to Earth. It is however interesting to note that most aspects of the NEO discovery process we commonly associate with asteroids happened first for comets

Type: Document
Date/Time: 2023-08-04 10:47 UTC

August 2023 Newsletter

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

September 2022 Newsletter

Type: Document
Date/Time: 2023-01-26 11:44 UTC

Asteroid 2023 BU

Type: Document
Date/Time: 2019-07-30 14:48 UTC

Close approach fact sheet for asteroid 2010WC9. A small asteroid impacted the Earth on 15 May 2018.

Type: Document
Date/Time: 2021-09-02 07:28 UTC
Type: Document
Date/Time: 2025-01-07 13:00 UTC

Type: Document
Date/Time: 2020-07-28 07:27 UTC

Asteroid 2020OY4

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

Type: Document
Date/Time: 2024-07-01 12:39 UTC

Type: Document
Date/Time: 2021-03-29 09:15 UTC
Type: Document
Date/Time: 2022-06-29 15:24 UTC
Type: Document
Date/Time: 2023-11-24 14:05 UTC
Type: Document
Date/Time: 2020-07-09 15:46 UTC

Type: Document
Date/Time: 2024-02-05 12:59 UTC

February 2024 Newsletter

Type: Document
Date/Time: 2022-03-04 12:25 UTC

March 2022 Newsletter

Type: Document
Date/Time: 2021-11-08 15:08 UTC

Asteroid 2019 XS

Type: Document
Date/Time: 2022-03-14 15:14 UTC
Type: Document
Date/Time: 2019-07-30 14:52 UTC

The asteroid ground track is provided below starting one day before the closest approach and extending for 1.5 days. The curve represents the movement of the sub-asteroid point over the Earth along the mentioned time interval. The track starts in the Pacific ocean at magnitude 16 and progresses westwards.

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 14:51 UTC

Every month about 40 known or recently discovered asteroids come within 0.05 astronomical units, or about 19 lunar radii, from our planet. In some cases, such as in the month of December 2016,four or even five objects reach their closest approach distance on the same day.

Type: Document
Date/Time: 2019-08-02 11:03 UTC

The NEO Coordination Centre is collaborating with the European Commission project NEOShield-2 on the dissemination of NEO physical properties. Our EARN-based physical properties database will be enhanced to host additional data.

Type: Document
Date/Time: 2024-12-06 10:55 UTC
Type: Document
Date/Time: 2022-10-24 09:50 UTC
Type: Document
Date/Time: 2024-08-05 17:32 UTC

August 2024 Newsletter

Type: Document
Date/Time: 2022-02-25 15:29 UTC
Type: Document
Date/Time: 2019-12-20 09:31 UTC

Type: Document
Date/Time: 2024-07-01 12:39 UTC

Type: Document
Date/Time: 2024-12-06 10:55 UTC
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: 2019-07-31 12:25 UTC

Ten years ago, on 6 October 2008,Richard Kowalski, an observer of the Catalina Sky Survey, spotted the first-ever asteroid found on an imminent collision course with the Earth. Over the following hours, hundreds of astrometric observations, plus light curves and spectroscopic data, were collected by observers all over the world.

Type: Document
Date/Time: 2024-07-01 12:39 UTC

Type: Document
Date/Time: 2024-06-28 10:21 UTC

2024MK

Type: Document
Date/Time: 2022-11-22 15:06 UTC
Type: Document
Date/Time: 2024-09-27 08:17 UTC
Type: Document
Date/Time: 2020-09-28 12:27 UTC

Type: Document
Date/Time: 2024-10-04 15:16 UTC

October 2024 Newsletter

Type: Document
Date/Time: 2024-08-16 08:23 UTC
Type: Document
Date/Time: 2022-11-22 15:06 UTC
Type: Document
Date/Time: 2022-03-14 15:13 UTC
Type: Document
Date/Time: 2024-03-22 08:31 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: 2020-07-09 15:47 UTC

Type: Document
Date/Time: 2019-08-02 09:49 UTC

The NEO Coordination Centre web portal is an evolving environment: new services are added whenever ready to be made publicly available. This is the case for two software packages addressing key issues in NEO science: an updated NEO population model and an NEO propagator.

Type: Document
Date/Time: 2020-11-05 09:33 UTC

Name:

flyeye

Type: Document
Date/Time: 2025-03-31 08:31 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.