News on asteroids
- Infrared survey exposes Nnera-Earth asteroid threaths
- ESA invites amateur astronomers to asteroid-hunti
- Dawn uncovers mineraology of the asteroid Vesta
- Dawn sees new surface features on giant asteroid
- Near-miss asteroid will pass earth again in 2013
- Asteroid hits house in Oslo, Norway
- Space-environment of an asteroid
- Bus-sized asteroid passes Earth
- Vesta is most likely cold enough to contain water-ice
- First images of Vesta from low-orbit
- Fresh impact craters on asteroid Vesta
- Take a virtual 3D tour over asteroid Vesta
- High-school student doubles NEO-tracking accuracy
- Asteroid YU55 is just a pile of rocks
- More images of asteroid 2005 YU55
- New video of asteroid 2005 YU55
- Asteroid Lutetia: A rare surviver from the birth of the Earth
- First video of asteroid 2005YU55
- New images of asteroid passing Earth
- 400m asteroid passes Earth tuesday
- Asteroid Lutetia is a "failed planet"
- Large asteroid passing Earth nov. 4
- Researchers reconstruct asteroid impact
- Asteroid displays comet-like tail
- The mysteries of asteroid Minerva and its moons
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19 new Near-Earth asteroids found in one night!
Tuesday, 01 March 2011 09:46
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| Solar system - Asteroids |
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The Pan-STARRS PS1 telescope on Haleakala on Hawaii, discovered 19 potentially dangerous near-Earth asteroids on the night of January 29; The most asteroids discovered by one telescope on a single night! Cataloging near-Earth asteroids is important for astrobiologists who are trying to determine scenarios for the future or life on Earth if one of these rocks from space were to collide with our planet. Pan-STARRS software engineer Larry Denneau spent that Saturday night in his University of Hawaii at Manoa office in Honolulu processing the PS1 data as it was transmitted from the telescope over the Internet. During the night and into the next afternoon, he and others came up with 30 possible new near-Earth asteroids. Asteroids are discovered because they appear to move against the background of stars. To confirm asteroid discoveries, scientists must carefully re-observe them several times within 12-72 hours to define their orbits, otherwise they are likely to be “lost.” Denneau and colleagues quickly sent their discoveries to the Minor Planet Center in Cambridge, Mass., which collects and disseminates data about asteroids and comets, so that other astronomers can re-observe the objects. Wainscoat, astronomer David Tholen, and graduate student Marco Micheli spent the next three nights searching for the asteroids using telescopes at Mauna Kea Observatories, Hawaii. On Sunday night, they confirmed that two of the asteroids were near-Earth asteroids before snow on Mauna Kea forced the telescopes to close. On Monday night, they confirmed nine more before fog set in.On Tuesday night, they searched for four, but found only one. After Tuesday, the remaining unconfirmed near-Earth asteroids had moved too far to be found again. Source: NASAs Astrobio.net |




