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In our newsletter of December last year, we devoted this section to the discovery of asteroid 1997 XF11. Twenty years ago, on 11 March 1998, astronomer B. Marsden released an IAU Circular stating that the asteroid would pass within 0.002 au of Earth on 26 October 2028.

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.

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.

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.

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.

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

The Fly-Eye Telescope is an innovative project of ESA‘s SSA-NEO Segment that will focus on survey and follow-up of NEOs. Another important milestone on the way to build the telescope was achieved: from 30 July to 1 August ESA attended the acceptance test of the equatorial mount at its production site in Verona, Italy.

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.