 |
The NEO 2010 WC9 on 2018-05-10 from Mayhill, New Mexico [New Mexico Skies](MPC Code H06)
a stack of 13-60 Second Luminance BIN2 Images taken with iTelescope.net's
(T11 TEL 0.50-m f/6.8 reflector + CCD + f/4.5 focal reducer)
By Steven M. Tilley |
 |
The NEO 2010 WC9 on 2018-05-10 from Mayhill, New Mexico [New Mexico Skies](MPC Code H06)
a stack of 13-60 Second Luminance BIN2 Images taken with iTelescope.net's
(T11 TEL 0.50-m f/6.8 reflector + CCD + f/4.5 focal reducer)
By Steven M. Tilley |
 |
The NEO 2010 WC9 on 2018-05-10 from Mayhill, New Mexico [New Mexico Skies](MPC Code H06)
a stack of 13-60 Second Luminance BIN2 Images taken with iTelescope.net's
(T11 TEL 0.50-m f/6.8 reflector + CCD + f/4.5 focal reducer)
By Steven M. Tilley |
If the Earth was the Size of a basketball the flyby of the asteroid 2010 WC9 would be ~3.7 Meters(~12.2 feet) away.
https://goo.gl/3SXrMg