(89959) 2002 NT7

Asteroid From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

(89959) 2002 NT7 (provisional designation 2002 NT7) is a near-Earth object with a diameter of 1.4 kilometers and potentially hazardous asteroid of the Apollo group.[2][3] It has a well determined orbit with an observation arc of 64 years including precovery images by Palomar Observatory dating back to 1954.[3]

Quick facts Discovery, Discovered by ...
(89959) 2002 NT7
Discovery[1]
Discovered byLINEAR
Discovery siteLincoln Lab's ETS
Discovery date9 July 2002
Designations
(89959) 2002 NT7
2002 NT7
Orbital characteristics[2]
Epoch 23 March 2018 (JD 2457800.5)
Uncertainty parameter 0
Observation arc62.68 yr (22,894 days)
Aphelion2.6529 AU
Perihelion0.8180 AU
1.7355 AU
Eccentricity0.5286
2.29 yr (835 days)
79.375°
0° 25m 51.96s / day
Inclination42.333°
132.08°
300.67°
Earth MOID0.0004 AU (60,000 km; 37,000 mi)
Physical characteristics
1.407±0.085 km[4]
0.224±0.053[4]
16.4[2]
Close

2002 NT7 became the first object observed by NASA's NEO program to be assigned a positive rating on both the Torino scale and the Palermo scale[5] for a small chance of an impact on 1 February 2019, however it passed Earth at roughly 0.4078 AU (61,010,000 km; 37,910,000 mi) on 13 January 2019 with an uncertainty region of around ±108 km.[6]

Discovery

It was discovered on 9 July 2002 by the Lincoln Near-Earth Asteroid Research team (LINEAR) at the U.S. Lincoln Laboratory Experimental Test Site near Socorro, New Mexico.[1] At the time of discovery it only had a 6-day observation arc of 9–14 July,[1] which poorly constrained possible future positions of the asteroid.

Despite inflammatory press reports, the object had a "low probability" of impact, approximately one in a million, for 1 February 2019.[7] On 22 July 2002, NEODyS posted a positive 0.18 Palermo scale rating.[5] Further observations, especially from Erich Meyer, quickly lowered the probability. . On 25 July 2002, the hazard rating on the Palermo scale was lowered to −0.25. However, the discovery of the object with an initial Palermo scale rating of 0.06[8] was a historical event for the NEO observation program.

2002 NT7 was removed from the Sentry Risk Table on 1 August 2002 (23 days after discovery), meaning there is no risk of an impact by it in the next 100 years.[9] On 13 January 2019, the asteroid safely passed 0.4078 AU (61,010,000 km; 37,910,000 mi) from Earth with a 3-sigma uncertainty region of about ±108 km.[6] Between 1900 and 2195 the closest approach to Earth will occur on 15 January 2099 at a distance of roughly 0.3739 AU (55,930,000 km; 34,760,000 mi) with an uncertainty region of about ±430 km.[6]

On 30 January 2020, the asteroid safely passed 0.02718 AU (4,066,000 km; 2,527,000 mi) from 2 Pallas.[10]

References

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