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Space rock Asteroid 2010 WC9 to encounter Earth on May 15th

Space rock Asteroid 2010 WC9 to encounter Earth on May 15th

Asteroid, Space rock, Asteroid 2010 WC9, NASA, Earth, Lunar distance, Science news, Technology newsPhoto related to new of Space rock Asteroid 2010 WC9 to encounter Earth on May 15th.

Washington: Space rock “Asteroid 2010 WC9” will have a near-Earth encounter, about half the lunar distance, on Tuesday, media reports said.

 

Asteroid, Space rock, Asteroid 2010 WC9, NASA, Earth, Lunar distance, Science news, Technology news

 

The asteroid measures from 60 to 130 meters and moves at a speed of more than 28,000 miles per hour, WeekFacts.com reported late on Saturday.

Asteroid 2010 WC9 was “lost” and then found. The Catalina Sky Survey in Arizona first detected it on November 30, 2010, and astronomers watched it until December 1, when it became too faint to see.

 

Asteroid, Space rock, Asteroid 2010 WC9, NASA, Earth, Lunar distance, Science news, Technology news

 

The rock has completed its orbit and now returns to Earth eight years later.

At 11.05 p.m. on Tuesday, Asteroid 2010 WC9 will make its closest approach only 0.53 lunar distances (126.419 miles) from Earth.

 

Asteroid 2010 WC9 with speed of 28,000 to flyby from near Earth on May 15:

 

According to NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory, this is the closest it will come in 300 years, the report said.

People can watch the spectacle on the Internet and the observatories of Northolt Branch in London will broadcast it live.

 

Asteroid, Space rock, Asteroid 2010 WC9, NASA, Earth, Lunar distance, Science news, Technology news

 

“We plan to broadcast this asteroid to our Facebook page if the weather forecast remains positive,” Guy Wells of the observatory was quoted as saying.

“The broadcast will last less than 25 minutes, since the asteroid will cross our field of view during this time period. The asteroid will move pretty fast (30 seconds of arc per minute).

 

Asteroid, Space rock, Asteroid 2010 WC9, NASA, Earth, Lunar distance, Science news, Technology news

 

“Our display will be updated every five seconds. We, of course, collect astrometric data while this happens, but the movement of the asteroid will occur every five seconds,” said Wells.