Supriya Ghosh (Editor)

2014 DX110

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Discovered by
  
Pan-STARRS (F51)

MPC designation
  
2014 DX110

Discovered
  
28 February 2014

Discoverer
  
Pan-STARRS

Discovery date
  
28 February 2014

Minor planet category
  
Apollo, NEO

Earth moid
  
0.2 cm

Asteroid group
  
Apollo asteroid

2014 DX110 httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Aphelion
  
3.5778 AU (535.23 Gm) (Q)

Perihelion
  
0.82623 AU (123.602 Gm) (q)

Similar
  
2000 EM26, 2007 VK184, 2014 HQ124, GU Piscium b, Kepler‑421b

Asteroid to whiz by earth march 5 2014 dx110


2014 DX110 (also written 2014 DX110) is an Apollo near-Earth asteroid roughly 20–40 m (66–131 ft) in diameter that passed less than 1 lunar distance from Earth on 5 March 2014. With an absolute magnitude (H) of 25.7, 2014 DX110 is potentially the largest asteroid to come inside the orbit of the Moon since 2013 PJ10 on 4 August 2013. The close approach was webcast live by Slooh and Virtual Telescope.

Contents

The asteroid came to opposition (furthest elongation in the sky from the Sun) on 15 February 2014, but the asteroid had a very faint apparent magnitude of about 23 and was only 10 degrees from the full moon. The asteroid was discovered on 28 February 2014 by Pan-STARRS at an apparent magnitude of 20 using a 1.8-meter (71 in) Ritchey–Chrétien telescope.

On 5 March 2014 at 21:00 UT the asteroid passed 0.00232 AU (347,000 km; 216,000 mi) from Earth and reached about apparent magnitude 15. At 22:22 UT it passed 0.00249 AU (372,000 km; 231,000 mi) from the Moon. By 6 March 2014 18:00 UT, the asteroid was less than 30 degrees from the Sun and dimming significantly.

It has an observation arc of 5 days with an uncertainty parameter of 6. It was removed from the JPL Sentry Risk Table on 5 March 2014 using JPL solution 3 with an observation arc of 5 days. When the asteroid only had an observation arc of 4 days, virtual clones of the asteroid that fit the uncertainty region in the known trajectory showed a 1 in 10 million chance that the asteroid could impact Earth on 4 March 2046. With a 2046 Palermo Technical Scale of −7.11, the odds of impact by 2014 DX110 in 2046 were about 13 million times less than the background hazard level of Earth impacts which is defined as the average risk posed by objects of the same size or larger over the years until the date of the potential impact. Using the nominal orbit, NEODyS shows that the asteroid will be 2.8 AU (420,000,000 km; 260,000,000 mi) from Earth on 4 March 2046.

Influx of asteroids asteroid 2014 dx110 to pass between earth moon


References

2014 DX110 Wikipedia