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  • SMAS October 2015 meeting

    Posted on October 26th, 2015 Lynn Powers No comments

    Join us on Friday October 30, 2015 starting at 7:00 p.m. at Bozeman Firestation #3, located at the regional park off of Davis.

    We have several items on our agenda including discussion of Near Earth Objects (NEO) such as “Spooky.”

    “The big asteroid that will zoom past Earth on Halloween may actually be a comet, NASA researchers say.

    The roughly 1,300-foot-wide (400 meters) asteroid 2015 TB145, which some astronomers have dubbed “Spooky,” will cruise within 300,000 miles (480,000 kilometers) of Earth on Halloween (Oct. 31) — just 1.3 times the average distance between our planet and the moon.

    Though 2015 TB145 poses no threat on this pass, the flyby will mark the closest encounter with such a big space rock until August 2027, when the 2,600-foot-wide (800 m) 1999 AN10 comes within 1 Earth-moon distance (about 238,000 miles, or 385,000 km), NASA officials said.

    Astronomers plan to beam radio waves at 2015 TB145 on Halloween using a 110-foot-wide (34 m) antenna at NASA’s Deep Space Network facility in Goldstone, California, then collect the reflected signals with the GreenBank Telescope in West Virginia and Puerto Rico’s Arecibo Observatory.

    Such work should reveal key details about the space rock’s size, shape, surface features and other characteristics — including, perhaps, its true identity.

    “The asteroid’s orbit is very oblong with a high inclination to below the plane of the solar system,” Lance Benner, of NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, California.

    “Such a unique orbit, along with its high encounter velocity — about 35 kilometers or 22 miles per second — raises the question of whether it may be some type of comet,” added Benner, who leads NASA’s asteroid radar research program. “If so, then this would be the first time that the Goldstone radar has imaged a comet from such a close distance.”

    Asteroid 2015 TB145 will be too faint to spot on Halloween with the naked eye, but anyone who’s interested can get a look at the object online, thanks to live telescope views provided by the Slooh Community Observatory and the Virtual Telescope Project.

    The Virtual Telescope Project will air a webcast at 8 p.m. EDT on Oct. 30 (0000 GMT on Oct. 31), while Slooh’s broadcast begins at 1 p.m. EDT (1700 GMT) on Oct. 31.”  http://www.space.com/30902-spooky-halloween-asteroid-may-be-comet.html

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