The NEO (357439) 2004 BL86 (Orbit type: Apollo ) (estimated to be 440–1000 meters in diameter) will safely make a Close-Approach of 3.1 Lunar Distance on 27 January 2015. This will be the closest "known" Approach by something this large (H = 18.8) until 2027, and may will briefly peak at around apparent magnitude 9. It has been schedule for Goldstone Observations(2015 Jan 27-Feb 1).
The NEO (357439) 2004 BL86
On the Night of 2015-01-03
from Siding Spring Observatory,
Coonabarabran, NSW,
Australia. (MPC Q62)
3 stacks of 15 - 60 Second
Luminance BIN2 Images
(Sky Motion 0.510"/min P.A.100.5| 0.524"/min P.A.99.4| 0.541"/min P.A.98.5)
taken with iTelescope.Net's
(TEL T32 0.43-m f/6.8 astrograph + CCD)
stack 1:2015 01 03.46767(11:13:26 UT)
stack 2:2015 01 03.48579(11:39:32 UT)
stack 3:2015 03 03.50430(12:06:11 UT)
(C) Steven M. Tilley
Links:
Asteroid to Fly By Earth Safely on January 26 (Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif.; January 13, 2015)
Observations(MPC)
Orbital Elements (JPL)
(357439) 2004BL86 -- ESA Space Situational Awareness
Goldstone Radar Observations Planning
(357439) 2004BL86 Ephemerides for 25 January 2015 through 29 January(NEODyS-2)
Goldstone Asteroid Schedule
Planetary Radar at Arecibo Observatory
JPL Absolute Magnitude table (H)
Abstract for Run 3579(Caltech)
Goldstone Solar System Radar by Marina Brozović,Jet Propulsion Laboratory, California Institute of Technology
Wikipedia (357439) 2004 BL86
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