Khaleej Times

Asteroid grazes past Earth in ‘critical’ rehearsal

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paris — A house-sized asteroid grazed past Earth Thursday, passing harmlessly inside the Moon’s orbit, as predicted, to give experts a rare opportunit­y to rehearse for a real strike threat in future.

Dubbed 2012 TC4, the object’s passing allowed scientists to practise spotting incoming objects, predicting their size and trajectory, and tracking their passage with a global network of telescopes and radars.

“We pretended that this was a critical object and exercised our communicat­ion,” said Detlef Koschny of the European Space Agency’s Near-Earth Object programme.

The trial run was “a big success,” he said, despite some instrument­s not working as planned. A radar system in Puerto Rico, for example, was out of service due to damage from the recent hurricane there.

“This is exactly why we do this exercise, to not be surprised by these things,” Koschny said.

The asteroid flitted past around 0541 GMT at less than 44,000km from Earth’s surface — just above the 36,000km plane at which hundreds of geosynchro­nous satellites orbit our planet.

This was about an eighth of the distance between the Earth and the Moon.

Scientists had predicted that TC4 was between 10 and 30 metres wide. In the end, it measured some 10-12 metres — the smaller end of the range.

“This means it must be very bright,” to make it appear bigger, said Koschny. Observatio­ns also revealed that TC4 spins around its axis in about 12 minutes, “which is quite fast.”

The asteroid was about half the size of the meteoroid that exploded in the atmosphere over Chelyabins­k in central Russia in 2013 with the kinetic energy of 30 Hiroshima atom bombs. The resulting shockwave blew out the windows of nearly 5,000 buildings and injured more than 1,200 people.

While the Chelyabins­k event caught everyone unawares, TC4 is one of thousands of space rocks whose whereabout­s are known.

Millions are not. —

 ?? AFP ?? This image shows near Earth Asteroid 2012 TC4 appearing as a dot at the centre of this composite of 37 individual 50-second exposures obtained with the FORS2 instrument on ESO’s Very Large Telescope in August, 2017. An asteroid the size of a house shaved past Earth at a distance of some 44,000km on Thursday. —
AFP This image shows near Earth Asteroid 2012 TC4 appearing as a dot at the centre of this composite of 37 individual 50-second exposures obtained with the FORS2 instrument on ESO’s Very Large Telescope in August, 2017. An asteroid the size of a house shaved past Earth at a distance of some 44,000km on Thursday. —

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