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Here's the image of the large asteroid - 2013 NK4 - that safely passed Earth on Monday, April 15, 2024. The Goldstone Radar in California acquired this image on April 13. Image via NASA/JPL-Caltech.
NASA astronomers were able to obtain radar images of the large asteroid that passed Earth safely on Monday, April 15, 2024. They captured an image of the asteroid - named 2013 NK4 - using the Goldstone Radar in California on April 13. NASA said: Radar narrow echoes probably establish that 2013 NK4 rotates very slowly, and the shape is bifurcated. These observations suggest asteroid 2013 NK4 is probably a binary contact. That means it's composed of two bodies or asteroids that have gravitated toward each other until they touch, resulting in this elongated shape. If a two-lobed asteroid sounds familiar to you, that's because we've seen space rocks like this before. For example, there's 4769 Castalia, discovered in 1989. It's even larger at 1.4 kilometers (0.87 miles) in diameter and is also classified as a potentially hazardous asteroid. And another example is Arrokoth, visited by the New Horizons mission. Arrokoth looks a bit like a snowman and lies out in the Kuiper Belt. Asteroid 2013 NK4 has a diameter of about 2,000 feet (610 meters). That makes it about twice as large as Apophis, the so-called doomsday asteroid that will pass closer than Earth's artificial satellites in 2029. But 2013 NK4 passed us at a much greater distance. It was more than eight times the moon's distance at its nearest to us. What's so amazing about it? People with telescopes could watch it fly by Earth! Closest approach for asteroid 2013 NK4 happened on Monday, April 15, 2024, at 14:51 UTC. But, due to its location in the sky, it was easier to see through a telescope on the nights of April 16 and 17. See finder charts below. Attention astronomy enthusiasts! Are you looking for a way to show your support for astronomy education? Donate to EarthSky.org here and help us bring knowledge of the night sky and our universe to people worldwide. Because the asteroid occasionally passes near Earth and is a fairly large space rock, 2013 NK4 holds the scary-sounding designation of Potentially Hazardous Asteroid. However, we've known about asteroid 2013 NK4 since 2013 (thus the year designation in its name), and it has a well-defined orbit. There was absolutely no danger to Earth during its flyby. 2013 NK4 orbits the sun every 378 days. But its orbit is slightly more elliptical than ours. Its orbit goes out past Mars and then dives in between the orbits of Venus and Mercury. The asteroid sped past our planet at 36,909 miles per hour (59,400 km per hour) or 10.2 miles per second (16.5 km per second) relative to Earth. Using GoTo or computerized telescopes makes observing an asteroid easier than ever before. You can see an asteroid in the telescope eyepiece or screen as a slowly moving point of light in front of the background stars. According to NASA/JPL, astronomers imaged the space rock using the 230-foot (70-meter) DSS-14 Goldstone radar antenna in California from April 13-19. (See image above from April 13.) Also, on April 14, observations of this object were taken from Canberra, Australia, using NASA's 34-meter (112-foot) DSS-35 dish antenna. Scientists hope their images will help to refine the asteroid's shape and size. Bottom line: A large asteroid - 2013 NK4, which spans about 2,000 feet (610 meters) across - safely passed Earth on April 15, 2024. It was visible in small telescopes on April 16 and 17. And check out the image from the Goldstone Radar in California from April 13. It shows a two-lobed object. View Articles
Eddie Irizarry of the Sociedad de AstronomÃa del Caribe (Astronomical Society of the Caribbean) has been a NASA Solar System Ambassador since 2004. He loves public outreach and has published multiple astronomy articles for EarthSky, as well as for newspapers in Puerto Rico. He has also offered dozens of conferences related to asteroids and comets at the Arecibo Observatory.
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