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Giant asteroid to get closer than moon

Never mind the recent spate of satellite showers; an asteroid the size of an aircraft carrier is sailing toward Earth, NASA says. But don't run for the hills just yet.

Edward Moyer Senior Editor
Edward Moyer is a senior editor at CNET and a many-year veteran of the writing and editing world. He enjoys taking sentences apart and putting them back together. He also likes making them from scratch. ¶ For nearly a quarter of a century, he's edited and written stories about various aspects of the technology world, from the US National Security Agency's controversial spying techniques to historic NASA space missions to 3D-printed works of fine art. Before that, he wrote about movies, musicians, artists and subcultures.
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Edward Moyer
 
Radar image of asteroid 2005 YU55. NASA/Cornell/Arecibo

Never mind the recent spate of satellite showers. An asteroid the size of an aircraft carrier is sailing toward Earth, NASA says.

Never fear, however. The space agency says that although next week's flyby of Asteroid 2005 YU55 will bring the rock closer to our home planet than even the moon gets, the asteroid will cruise safely past, leaving in its wake not destruction but data.

The agency has already begun using radio waves to scan the 1,300-foot-wide space rock, which will get closest to Earth on Tuesday at about 3:30 p.m. PT. With antennas at its Deep Space Network at Goldstone, Calif., and the Arecibo Planetary Radar Facility in Puerto Rico, NASA hopes to gather a wealth of detail about the asteroid's surface features, shape, dimensions, and other physical properties.

 
NASA's 70-meter Deep Space Network antenna at Goldstone, Calif. NASA/JPL-Caltech

An extraterrestrial rock hasn't come this close to Earth since 1976, and we won't witness another such close encounter till 2028, NASA says. YU55 itself hasn't come this near for 200 years. Amateur astronomers who want to check it out for themselves will need a telescope with an aperture of 6 inches or larger, the agency says.

Radar observations made of YU55 in 2010 reveal it to be approximately spherical and slowly spinning, with a rotation period of about 18 hours.

NASA's Near-Earth Object Observations Program, aka "Spaceguard," looks out for rocks like YU55 and plots their orbits to see if any are a threat.