| Found: Long-lost Asteroid, Dangerous to Earth | | Print | |
| 10/08/07 | |
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However, meteor researcher Peter Jenniskens of the SETI institute now argues, with confirmation from the Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory' Minor Planet Center, that this wayward wanderer is in fact the same thing as the recently discovered 2007 RR9, making a reappearance this year as part of a 4.7-year orbit. Moreover, the astronomer says, the "asteroid" doesn't really qualify as an asteroid at all. Instead, Jenniskens believes it's the dormant fragment of a comet nucleus, part of a larger body that broke up in the relatively recent past (in stellar terms), creating the Gamma Piscid meteor showers in mid-October and early November. Under neither name is it likely to hit Earth anytime in the near future. But the little long-lost beastie will be high in the southern sky as it passes by Earth in early November, about .07 astronomical unit away (about 6.5 million miles). Read the rest at: Wired
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For more than 40 years, an asteroid believed to be potentially dangerous to Earth has been essentially lost to view. But no more. 













