Lost Asteroid rediscovered

Programmer/ May 14, 2018/ Asteroids, Minor Planet Center, NASA, NEO, PHA, Space Weather

In Nov. 2010, the Catalina Sky Survey in Arizona discovered a near-Earth asteroid as wide as a football field. Before astronomers could fully trace its orbit, however, the receding space rock faded away. It has been lost ever since–that is, until last week when it reappeared, approaching Earth. The name of the asteroid is 2010 WC9. Marian Urbanik of Čadca, Slovakia, photographed

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Oumuamua came from binary star system

Programmer/ March 23, 2018/ Asteroids, Minor Planet Center, NASA, NASA JPL, NEO, Pan-STARRS, PHA

By Jake Parks  |  Published: Thursday, March 22, 2018 The first known cosmic tourist was likely ejected from a system with two parent stars. Last October, astronomers spotted the first known visitor from another star system as it zoomed through the inner solar system at breakneck speeds. The interstellar interloper, since named ‘Oumuamua (Hawaiian for “scout”), is a cigar-shaped asteroid roughly 1,300 feet (400

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