Huge Asteroid to Fly Past Earth WednesdaySept. 27, 2004
By Robert Roy Britt
Senior Science Writer
The largest asteroid ever known to pass near Earth is making a close celestial brush with the planet this week in an event that professional and backyard astronomers are watching closely.
The space rock, named Toutatis, will not hit Earth, despite rumors of possible doom that have circulated the Internet for months. Humanity is very fortunate there won't be an impact, as the asteroid is large enough to cause global devastation. Toutatis is about 2.9 miles long and 1.5 miles wide (4.6 by 2.4 kilometers).
On Wednesday, Sept. 29 it will be within a million miles of Earth, or about four times the distance to the Moon.
No space rock this big will pass so close in the next century, scientists say. And while similarly large asteroids have hit the planet in the distant past, none so big have come so close since astronomers have had the means to notice them. Many smaller space rocks have been spotted much closer, even inside the orbit of the Moon.
NASA scientists and other asteroid experts have been watching Toutatis for more than a decade, and though its orbit changes slightly with each 4-year trip around the Sun, they have a good handle on the path.
The position of the asteroid on this pass is known to a precision roughly equal to the rock's size, said Alan Harris, a senior research scientist at the Space Science Institute. That leaves a little wiggle room for its exact location at closest approach, but not much.
"Because of the nature of the orbit, we cannot predict thousands of years into the future for this object, but in anyone's lifetime now, there is no chance" of an impact, Harris told SPACE.com.
Spotting Toutatis
Toutatis will not be visible to the unaided eye. Experienced telescope users can see it now from the Southern Hemisphere, and in early October it will be visible from the north.
Finding Toutatis will be challenging, Harris said, due to a combination of the asteroid's position in the sky and interfering moonlight.
Because the asteroid is so close, its location in the sky will vary significantly for skywatchers in different places on Earth at any given moment. And because it moves quickly, the location changes constantly. Printed sky maps struggle to provide enough detail to be useful.
"In a large telescope the motion would be perceptible against any stars in the field more or less in real time, sort of like watching the second hand on a clock," Harris said, adding that the movement would be "not quite that fast, but noticeable."
Highly experienced observers will use complex plotting information known as ephemeris data. Others can use software programs that generate maps for specific times and locations.
When, where and how
At its closest on Sept. 29, Toutatis will be visible only to observers in the Southern Hemisphere.
Large and steady binoculars will be able to pick out the pinprick of sunlight reflecting off the asteroid, providing observers "use a good program like Starry Night Pro to plot its incredibly rapid motion across the sky," said Clay Sherrod of the Arkansas Sky Observatory. (The software company Starry Night is owned by Imaginova, parent also of SPACE.com.)
Soon thereafter, experienced backyard astronomers north of the equator will have a chance to find Toutatis.
"By early October, it will suddenly be re-emerging into northern skies as its apparent trajectory will bring it back into very favorable view," Sherrod said in an e-mail interview. But by then the asteroid will be moving away from Earth and getting dimmer. It will quickly become "very difficult" to spot even with an 8-inch telescope, he said.
Sherrod photographed the giant space rock last week (it was visible then in the north through large telescopes) and said exposures longer than eight seconds showed a trail as the giant rock moved slightly against the background of stars.
"It has been quite a wonderful show so far," he said.
Strange rock indeed
Asteroid Toutatis was discovered in 1989. Scientists have modeled its strange rotation and odd shape -- it looks something like a pockmarked dumbbell -- on previous flybys.
Instead of a fixed north pole, Toutatis' axis of rotation wanders in two separate cycles of 5.4 and 7.3 Earth-days. So while most asteroids rotate somewhat like a football thrown in a perfect spiral, "Toutatis tumbles like a flubbed pass," says Scott Hudson of Washington State University.
Astronomers will use this week's flyby to examine Toutatis in greater detail, with a goal of pinning down the rock's rate of spin and better estimating its future path.
While some rumors have suggested the asteroid's forecasted course might be off by enough to cause a collision with Earth, Sherrod agrees with Harris and other scientists that there is no chance for calamity. Sherrod has been monitoring Toutatis' movement since July 3, logging more than 500 observations that allow mapping of a precise trajectory.
"Although the actual path of it has indeed varied a slight bit from the original calculated, there is absolutely no chance of a physical encounter or impact with Earth," he said.
FAIR USE NOTICE. Many of the stories on this site contain copyrighted material whose use has not been specifically authorized by the copyright owner. We are making this material available in its efforts to advance the understanding of environmental issues and sustainability, human rights, economic and political democracy, and issues of social justice. We believe this constitutes a 'fair use' of the copyrighted material as provided for in Section 107 of the US Copyright Law. If you wish to use such copyrighted material for purposes of your own that go beyond 'fair use'...you must obtain permission from the copyright owner. In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, the material on this site is distributed without profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the included information for research and educational purposes. For more information go to: http://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/17/107.shtml
Carmen Electra
Michael Jackson
Matt Damon
Cuba Gooding, Jr.
Montel Williams
Ben Affleck
Kevin Costner
Jon Lovitz
Charles Barkley
Don Cheadle
Jason Alexander
Jerry Cantrell
George Noory (C2C)
Uri Geller & Wife
Hines Ward, MVP
Gary Busey & Dr. Turi
Ray Romano
Evander Holyfield
Me & Cheech
Jenny McCarthy
Ray Lewis
Boomer
Dr. Laffitte Right hand man of Martin Luther King
Jennifer Hudson Oscar and American Idol Winner
Flavor Flav Rap Artist
Sally Jessy Raphael TV and Radio Personality
Gary Busey
Robert L. Carothers President of the University of Rhode Island
Les Brown Motivational Speaker & Best Selling Author
Dr. Louis Turi The World's Greatest Astrologer
Dannion Brinkley Autobiography "Saved by the Light"
Lucy Arnez Actress
Bibi McGill Beyonc's Lead Guitarist
Stevie Wonder
James O'Neil Former Attorney General of RI
Richard Paul Evans Bestselling author of the Christmas Box Miracle
National President of Phi Kappa Phi
Aretha Franklin The Queen of Soul
John J. Kennedy Presidential Candidate
Jane Kennedy Actress & Miss America
Sally Jessy Raphael TV and Radio Personality
Wayne Dyer Bestselling author of You Will See it When You Believe it and TV personality
Brandon Bays Bestselling Author of the book "The Journey"
Nicole Whitney Radio Talk Show Host and Founder of News for the Soul, Rated by AOL and Google #1 Radio Talk Show on the Internet
Anne Marie Evers Author of Your Passport to Happiness
Matthew Adams Co-Author Chicken Soup for the Soul
Dannion Brinkley Autobiography "Saved by the Light"
Don Shula Former Miami Dolphins coach with the most wins in NFL history
Bruce Sundlun Former Governor
Palane Miedaner Author of Coach Yourself to Success, seen on all the major television programs