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Oct 22, 2020
Map of 316 impacts in Fireballs Reported by US Government Sensors (1988-Apr-15 to 2020-Oct-21; limited to events >= 0.3kt)
Oct 5, 2020
Back of the Envelope Calculation Using the JPL's Fireball Data --- 2018 VP1
I did a back of the envelope calculation using the JPL's fireball data
to estimated that asteroids equal to or greater than 2018 VP1 impact the
Earth at a rate of one every 37 to 53 days. IMHO we are at greater
risk from the "background." https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/12i7lhXgL0u6m36eoenKDKV-dLtkoedz0/edit?f#gid=1305411600 asteroid https://cneos.jpl.nasa.gov/fireballs/
https://cneos.jpl.nasa.gov/sentry/details.html#?des=2018%20VP1
Aug 7, 2020
I am working on getting a website The Asteroid News up and running
I am working on getting a website the Asteroid News up and running. There is a need for very high quality researches, writers, editors, web editors, coders, databases, etc. info(AT)theasteroidnews(dot)com
Jul 25, 2020
What is Up With Asteroid 2018 SV13
Here a write up "What is Up With Asteroid 2018 SV13" Is asteroid 2018 SV13 real? NO
Jul 22, 2020
The NEO 2020 NK1 On 2020-07-21 From Siding Spring Observatory Australia.
The NEO 2020 NK1 Has Been Rated Torino Impact Hazard Scale 1 this happens a few times a year. The current The NEO 2020 NK1 Has Been Rated Torino Impact Hazard Scale 1 this happens a few times a year. The current Torino Scale state for 1 "
A routine discovery in which a pass near Earth is predicted, that
poses no unusual level of danger. Current calculations show the chance
of collision is extremely unlikely with no cause for public attention or
public concern. New telescopic observations very likely will lead to
reassignment to Level 0." I in order to help lower uncertainty I did an imaging run with itelescope.net's T30 in itelescope.net
.The NEO 2020 NK1 on 2020-07-21 from Siding Spring Observatory Australia - MPC Q62 using T30 (0.50-m f/6.8 reflector + CCD) a stack of 15 - 20 second luminance BIN2 images . By Steven M. Tilley |
The NEO 2020 NK1 on 2020-07-21from Siding Spring Observatory Australia - MPC Q62 using T30 (0.50-m f/6.8 reflector + CCD) a stack of 15 - 20 second luminance BIN2 images . By Steven M. Tilley |
The NEO 2020 NK1 on 2020-07-21 from Siding Spring Observatory Australia - MPC Q62 using T30 (0.50-m f/6.8 reflector + CCD) a stack of 15 - 20 second luminance BIN2 images . By Steven M. Tilley |
Background
(as of 2020-07-21 )
(Check links for Updates)
- Object: 2020 NK1
- Orbit Type: Apollo [NEO, PHA]
- Approximate Diameter: 420 m - 940 m (1377.95 to 3083.99 Feet) (Absolute H= 19.0 )
- On the Sentry Risk Table: YES [8 Number of Potential Impacts 2090-2101]
- for more information read Understanding Risk Pages by Jon Giorgini
- On the NEODyS CLOMON2 risk page: YES[22 Number of Potential Impacts 2086-2102]
- Listed on The Near-Earth Object Human Space Flight Accessible Targets Study (NHATS):NO
- Listed on the Goldstone Asteroid Radar Schedule:NO
- Listed on the Arecibo Asteroid Radar Schedule:YES(Priority Level High)
- Radar Observations: none (yet)
- Discovery observation was made:2020 07 13.567919 by ATLAS-MLO, Mauna Loa(MPC Code T08)
- Last Observation(publish) was made:2020 07 21.18925000
ESA Optical Ground Station, Tenerife (MPC Code J04) - Number of Optical Observations(published): 38
- Oppositions: 1
- Number of Observatories Reporting (Published) Observations :8
- Observatories Reporting (Published) Observations(MPC Code):
- (474) Mount John Observatory, Lake Tekapo, New Zealand.
- (E10) Siding Spring-Faulkes Telescope South, Australia/NSW.
- (J04) ESA Optical Ground Station, Tenerife , Canary Islands (Spain).
- (Q59) Siding Spring-LCO Clamshell {#}2 Australia/NSW.
- (T05) ATLAS-HKO, Haleakala, US/Hawaii. Observer
- (T08) ATLAS-MLO, Mauna Loa,US/Hawaii. Observers
- (W88) Slooh.com Chile Observatory, La Dehesa,Chile.
- (Z84) Calar Alto-Schmidt, Spain.
- Perihelion Distance: 0.49 AU
- Aphelion Distance: 2.28 AU
- Earth MOID: 0.00275208 AU (1.071 Lunar Distance) 64.55 Earth radii
- Close-Approach to Earth: 2020-Jul-31 Minimum Distance 0.0544283775663102(AU) 21.182 Lunar Distance (LD)
- JPL Small-Body Database Browser (2020 NK1)
- Sentry: Earth Impact Monitoring 2020 NK1 -- Earth Impact Risk Summary
- NEODyS-2 2020NK1
- Understanding Risk Pages by Jon Giorgini
- Arecibo Asteroid Radar Schedule
- MPC Observations Database 2020 NK1
- Torino Scale
- Sentry: Earth Impact Monitoring Introduction
- Palermo Technical Impact Hazard Scale
- The Tracking News - Earth's Busy Neighborhood , 2020-07-21, 2020-07-20, 2020-07-19, 2020-07-18 , Consolidated Risk Tables
- Quantifying the risk posed by potential Earth impacts Steven R. Chesley (JPL), Paul W. Chodas (JPL), Andrea Milani (Univ. Pisa), Giovanni B. Valsecchi Icarus 159, 423-432 (2002) (PDF)
Jul 21, 2020
The NEO 2020 NK1 Has Been Rated Torino Impact Hazard Scale 1 -- Normal (Green Zone)
The NEO 2020 NK1 Has Been Rated Torino Impact Hazard Scale 1 this happens a few times a year. The current Torino Scale state for 1 "
A routine discovery in which a pass near Earth is predicted, that
poses no unusual level of danger. Current calculations show the chance
of collision is extremely unlikely with no cause for public attention or
public concern. New telescopic observations very likely will lead to
reassignment to Level 0." 2020 NK1 just need more observations.
Artist's concept of a near-Earth object. Image: Courtesy NASA/JPL-Caltech |
Background
(as of 2020-07-20 )
(Check links for Updates)
- Object: 2020 NK1
- Orbit Type: Apollo [NEO, PHA]
- Approximate Diameter: 420 m - 940 m (1377.95 to 3083.99 Feet) (Absolute H= 19.0 )
- On the Sentry Risk Table: YES [26 Number of Potential Impacts 2084-2106]
- for more information read Understanding Risk Pages by Jon Giorgini
- On the NEODyS CLOMON2 risk page: YES[46 Number of Potential Impacts 2080-2103]
- Listed on The Near-Earth Object Human Space Flight Accessible Targets Study (NHATS):NO
- Listed on the Goldstone Asteroid Radar Schedule:NO
- Listed on the Arecibo Asteroid Radar Schedule:YES(Priority Level High)
- Radar Observations: none (yet)
- Discovery observation was made:2020 07 13.567919 by ATLAS-MLO, Mauna Loa(MPC Code T08)
- Last Observation(publish) was made:2020 07 19.607192 by ATLAS-HKO, Haleakala(MPC Code T05)
- Number of Optical Observations(published): 29
- Oppositions: 1
- Number of Observatories Reporting (Published) Observations :6
- Observatories Reporting (Published) Observations(MPC Code):
- (474) Mount John Observatory, Lake Tekapo, New Zealand.
- (E10) Siding Spring-Faulkes Telescope South, Australia/NSW.
- (T05) ATLAS-HKO, Haleakala, US/Hawaii. Observer
- (T08) ATLAS-MLO, Mauna Loa,US/Hawaii. Observers
- (W88) Slooh.com Chile Observatory, La Dehesa,Chile.
- (Z84) Calar Alto-Schmidt, Spain.
- Perihelion Distance: 0.49 AU
- Aphelion Distance: 2.28 AU
- Earth MOID: 0.00278361 AU (1.083 Lunar Distance) 65.29 Earth radii
- Close-Approach to Earth: 2020-Jul-31 Minimum Distance 0.052769696480622 (AU) 20.536 Lunar Distance (LD)
- JPL Small-Body Database Browser (2020 NK1)
- Sentry: Earth Impact Monitoring 2020 NK1 -- Earth Impact Risk Summary
- NEODyS-2 2020NK1
- Understanding Risk Pages by Jon Giorgini
- Arecibo Asteroid Radar Schedule
- MPC Observations Database 2020 NK1
- Torino Scale
- Sentry: Earth Impact Monitoring Introduction
- Palermo Technical Impact Hazard Scale
- Quantifying the risk posed by potential Earth impacts Steven R. Chesley (JPL), Paul W. Chodas (JPL), Andrea Milani (Univ. Pisa), Giovanni B. Valsecchi Icarus 159, 423-432 (2002) (PDF)
Jul 17, 2020
2018 SV13... "the object is not real"
There has been some media hub ba over 2018 SV13 Update on 2020 July 17 at 14:31 UT the Minor Planet Center Issued "MPEC 2020-O10 : RETRACTION OF 2018 SV13" .. 2018 SV13 " … the object is not real..." see https://minorplanetcenter.net/mpec/K20/K20O10.html
Image edited by Steven M. Tilley see the original (public domain) image Planetoid crashing into primordial Earth at Donald Davis' official site |
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