Showing posts with label asteroid. Show all posts
Showing posts with label asteroid. Show all posts

30 April 2010

Asteroids 2010 Scheduled MAY-SEP 2010

NEOs Scheduled Close Approaches
by JPL/NASA for MAY-SEP 2010
*
* subject to update without notice!
For more information see the JPL/NASA site:
http://neo.jpl.nasa.gov/ca/
Object
Name
Close
Approach
Date
Miss
Distance
(LD)
(2010 GU6) 2010-May-01 49.7
(2007 TD71) 2010-May-01 74.5
(2009 YF) 2010-May-02 58.1
(2010 GT6) 2010-May-02 53.0
(2007 DB61) 2010-May-02 35.0
(2009 WA) 2010-May-03 77.1
(2010 HV20) 2010-May-04 36.6
(2010 HS20) 2010-May-05 30.3
(2010 GU21) 2010-May-05 8.0
(2010 FA81) 2010-May-05 17.7
(2008 TE) 2010-May-06 45.3
(2009 BD) 2010-May-07 9.1
(2010 GA24) 2010-May-09 20.0
(2010 AF30) 2010-May-10 69.2
(2008 JP) 2010-May-14 54.7
(2003 FY6) 2010-May-15 54.7
(2003 HR32) 2010-May-17 55.2
(2010 FC81) 2010-May-18 18.2
(2002 XQ40) 2010-May-18 45.2
(2009 YT6) 2010-May-20 50.8
(2004 JX20) 2010-May-20 58.1
(2009 LD) 2010-May-26 41.3
152978 (2000 GJ147) 2010-May-29 73.2
(2005 GB120) 2010-May-30 67.3
(2010 GA34) 2010-May-31 16.4
(2010 FH81) 2010-Jun-01 47.4
(1999 MN) 2010-Jun-04 13.0
(2004 KH17) 2010-Jun-05 32.8
234061 (1999 HE1) 2010-Jun-05 29.9
162120 (1998 SH36) 2010-Jun-12 59.7
(2007 XB10) 2010-Jun-13 27.8
(2007 DD) 2010-Jun-17 33.3
(2009 UD) 2010-Jun-23 64.3
(2007 CS5) 2010-Jun-24 22.5
(2008 YC3) 2010-Jun-24 12.2
(2008 WM64) 2010-Jun-24 24.8
(2010 HC) 2010-Jun-27 46.7
154590 (2003 MA3) 2010-Jun-27 28.8
(2005 ED318) 2010-Jun-28 27.1
(2005 QC5) 2010-Jun-29 58.9
(2005 WE) 2010-Jul-02 51.4
(2009 HU44) 2010-Jul-02 57.6
(2008 YJ3) 2010-Jul-10 40.0
(2008 UP100) 2010-Jul-11 34.3
(2009 BD) 2010-Jul-12 10.6
(2002 LT24) 2010-Jul-14 56.1
(2002 BF25) 2010-Jul-18 10.5
(2008 NP3) 2010-Jul-19 26.8
(2008 VK14) 2010-Jul-19 75.5
(2006 BX7) 2010-Jul-21 66.1
(2009 PC) 2010-Jul-22 48.5
(2006 KL21) 2010-Jul-23 33.4
(2001 OT) 2010-Jul-23 54.8
85989 (1999 JD6) 2010-Jul-27 53.9
(2003 MJ4) 2010-Jul-31 62.9
(1994 CB) 2010-Jul-31 35.2
(2002 QY6) 2010-Jul-31 55.6
(2007 ML13) 2010-Aug-03 75.3
6239 Minos 2010-Aug-10 38.3
(2002 AV31) 2010-Aug-11 73.0
(2007 YT56) 2010-Aug-11 41.6
(2002 AC9) 2010-Aug-13 19.0
(2005 NZ6) 2010-Aug-14 60.5
(2007 EH) 2010-Aug-14 75.6
(2010 CB55) 2010-Aug-15 18.6
(2004 SC56) 2010-Aug-18 33.5
(2010 FO92) 2010-Aug-19 59.1
(2008 OS9) 2010-Aug-23 73.6
(2000 QV7) 2010-Aug-24 58.9
(2007 DS7) 2010-Aug-26 37.2
(2007 DD) 2010-Aug-28 32.0
(2002 EY2) 2010-Aug-30 42.1
85640 (1998 OX4) 2010-Aug-31 73.4
154029 (2002 CY46) 2010-Sep-02 63.8
(2007 VG189) 2010-Sep-13 67.5
(2010 EX11) 2010-Sep-26 50.1
(2009 SH2) 2010-Sep-30 7.1

24 July 2009

German Meteor/Meteorite News- 24JUL09

Spiegel Online - ‎Jul 22, 2009‎
Auch wie Leben auf den Mars gekommen sein könnte, etwa über Meteoriten, wie es die Anhänger der Panspermie-Hypothese vermuten, will der Forscher nicht ...

Asteroid hat Massensterben ausgelöst

DiePresse.com - ‎Jul 21, 2009‎
Sie hat Kennett nun in Kalifornien gefunden, und zwar in der seltenen Diamantenform Lonsdaleit, die auf der Erde „nur in Meteoriten und Einschlagkratern“

Kreative Katastrophen

Tagesspiegel - ‎Jul 21, 2009‎
Doch hatten Schlangen und Krokodile den Einschlag des Meteoriten gut überstanden. Warum nicht sie, sondern die Säugetiere die Vorherrschaft übernahmen, ...

Ältester Granit: 4,53 Milliarden Jahre alt

WELT ONLINE - ‎Jul 18, 2009‎
Gemeinsam mit einem japanischen Kollegen fand Addi Bischoff von der Universität Münster in einem Meteoriten Granit, der 4,53 Milliarden Jahre alt ist. ...



20 July 2009

Jupiter Impact News- Jupiter Impacted? 19JUL09

JUPITER IMPACT?
On July 19th, a veteran observer of Jupiter in Australia photographed a fresh dark "scar" in Jupiter's cloudtops; the feature resembles the Shoemaker-Levy 9 impacts of 1994. It is possible that Jupiter has been struck anew by an asteroid or comet. Astrophotographers around the world should train their optics on Jupiter to confirm the event and monitor its progress. Visit http://spaceweather.com
for photos and updates.

Possible fresh impact mark on Jupiter captured by Anthony Wesly in
Australia. Photo-

http://www.acquerra.com.au/astro/gallery/jupiter/20090719-155537/large.jpg

29 June 2009

Russia Past Super Bolide News- Tunguska 101 29JUN09


Soviet Academy of Science 1927 expedition led by Leonid Kulik
Tunguska 101th anniversary 30JUN09
Tomorrow, Tuesday June 30, 2009 marks the one-hundred-first anniversary of the Tunguska impact event in Russia of June 30, 1908. Wikipedia has a very good report on Tunguska:
... At around 7:17 a.m. local time, Tungus natives and Russian settlers in the hills northwest of Lake Baikal observed a column of bluish light, nearly as bright as the Sun, moving across the sky. About 10 minutes later, there was a flash and a sound similar to artillery fire. Eyewitnesses closer to the explosion reported the sound source moving east to north. The sounds were accompanied by a shock wave that knocked people off their feet and broke windows hundreds of miles away. The majority of eyewitnesses reported only the sounds and the tremors, and not the sighting of the explosion. Eyewitness accounts differ as to the sequence of events and their overall duration. ... (more)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tunguska_event

01 June 2009

Meteorite storms brought Earth alive 1JUN09

Meteorite storms brought Earth alive

by Skymania.com
Researchers at Imperial College London analysed the remains of 15 fragments of ancient meteorites that had crashed around the world. They then baked them at very high temperatures just like they would experience when entering the ...
Skymania News | Space headlines - http://news.skymania.com/

06 April 2009

Meteorite News 6APR09

Great ball of fire! Shooting star spotted over Ireland sparks ...
Daily Mail
By Daily Mail Reporter
Security cameras in Ireland may help scientists to find a meteorite that streaked to Earth on Sunday night. ...

Hunt is on to catch a fallen meteorite
Irish Independent - Dublin,Ireland
EXCITED astronomers are hot on the trail of a meteorite they believe may have struck Ireland on Saturday night. For a few seconds around midnight on ...

How Life Shatters Chemistry's Mirror
Astrobiology Magazine - USA
"We're still in the dark how it happened," says Sandra Pizzarello from Arizona State University, who has analyzed many of the meteorite samples. ...
http://www.astrobio.net/news/index.php?name=News&file=article&sid=3092

Astronomers make unprecedented asteroid impact observations
Gizmag - Victoria, Australia
The measurements taken by the Herschel Telescope in La Palma were now compared with the direct analysis of the meteorite shards. The two were found to be in ...
http://www.gizmag.com/astronomers-asteroid-hit-the-earth/11395/

What's in a name? Lake Drummond, Great Dismal Swamp
The Virginian-Pilot - Norfolk,VA,USA
Theories abound about its origin, a meteorite, an intense peat fire, a tectonic shift. There is even a Native American legend that a great " fire bird" ...
http://hamptonroads.com/2009/04/whats-name-lake-drummond-great-dismal-swamp

Why ET's genetic code could be just like ours
MIT Technology Review - Cambridge, MA,USA
Curiously, analyses of meteorite samples have found exactly these same 10 amino acids. Various researchers have noted this link but none have explained it. ...
http://www.technologyreview.com/blog/arxiv/23309/

01 April 2009

CONTACT INFORMATION and AFFILIATION


Impact Field Studies Group
ISFG Field Research Member-ASIA Since 2005
http://web.eps.utk.edu/~faculty/ifsg.htm

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IYA 2009 International Year of Astronomy





















Astronomers Without Borders
Regional Coordinator- Southeast Asia Since 2008

Japan Chapter: Japan Planetary Data- Japan Sky Watch
Astronomers Without Borders is dedicated to fostering understanding and goodwill across national and cultural boundaries by creating relationships through the universal appeal of astronomy. Astronomers Without Borders projects promote sharing. Sharing resources. Sharing knowledge. Sharing inspiration. All through a common interest in something basic and universal. Sharing the sky.
http://www.astronomerswithoutborders.org/

------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Planetary Data Japan- Japan Sky Watch
For More Information Contact:
Dirk Ross @ drtanukiATgmail.com
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

IMCA

International Meteorite Collectors Association

Member #5677

Since 2000

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Cross-Links:

Meteorobs · Amateur Meteor Astronomy

http://tech.groups.yahoo.com/group/meteorobs/

Institut de Mecanique Celeste et de Calcul des Ephemerides-France

http://www.imcce.fr/imcce.php?lang=en (english version)

Polish Fireball Network

http://www.pkim.org/

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Site Counter-ClusterMap

Locations of visitors to this page
(Click to View World CLUSTER MAP)


updated 29AUG09 7SEP09

25 March 2009

NASA-- Sudan Meteorite Recovery Teleconference to be held 25MAR09

MEDIA ADVISORY : M09-044

NASA Sets Teleconference To Discuss Recovered Meteorites

WASHINGTON -- NASA will hold a media teleconference on Wednesday, March 25, at 2 p.m. EDT (1800 UT) to reveal science findings from recently discovered meteorites.

The meteorites originate from a small asteroid that entered Earth's atmosphere over the Nubian Desert of northern Sudan on Oct. 7, 2008. The discovery presents scientists with an unprecedented opportunity to understand these nomads of the solar system better.

The briefing participants are:

- Peter Jenniskens, meteor astronomer at NASA's Ames Research Center, Moffett Field, Calif., and the SETI Institute in Mountain View, Calif.

- Steve Chesley, scientist in NASA's Near-Earth Object Program Office at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif.

- Michael Zolensky, cosmic mineralogist at NASA's Johnson Space Center in Houston

- Lucy McFadden, professor of astronomy at the University of Maryland in College Park

Reporters who would like to participate in the call should submit requests for dial-in instructions to Steve Cole at stephen.e.cole@nasa.gov.

A replay of the teleconference will be available until May 1 by dialing 888-403-4660.

Supporting visuals will be available online at the start of the event at: http://www.nasa.gov/topics/earth/tc3

Audio of the teleconference will be streamed live on NASA's Web site at: http://www.nasa.gov/newsaudio

17 March 2009

Asteroid to Fly By Earth Wednesday 17MAR09

http://www.jpl.nasa.gov/news/features.cfm?feature=2085

Asteroid to Fly By Earth Wednesday
Jet Propulsion Laboratory
March 17, 2009
PASADENA, Calif. -

A small asteroid will fly past Earth early tomorrow morning (Wed., March 18). The asteroid, 2009 FH, is about 50 feet (15meters) wide. Its closest approach to Earth will occur at 5:17 a.m. PDT(8:17 a.m. EDT, 12:17 UTC) at an altitude of about 49,000 miles (79,000kilometers)."This asteroid flyby will be a good viewing opportunity for both professional and amateur astronomers," said Don Yeomans of the Near-Earth Object Office at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif. "The asteroid poses no risk of impact to Earth now or for the foreseeable future."NASA detects and tracks asteroids and comets passing close to Earth. The Near Earth Object Observation Program, commonly called "Spaceguard,"plots the orbits of these objects to determine if any could be potentially hazardous to our planet.For more information, visit: http://neo.jpl.nasa.gov/

Media contact: DC Agle/JPL 818-393-9011

ASTEROID BUZZES EARTH 17MAR09

Space Weather News for March 17, 2009
http://spaceweather.com
ASTEROID BUZZES EARTH: Newly-discovered asteroid 2009 FH is flying past Earth tonight only 85,000 km (0.00057 AU) away. That's a little more than twice the height of a geosynchronous communications satellite. Experienced amateur astronomers in North America can photograph the 20-meter-wide space rock racing through the constellation Gemini after sunset on March 17th. It should be about as bright as a 14th magnitude star.

Please visit http://spaceweather.com for an ephemeris and updates.

This is the second time in March that an asteroid has flown so close to Earth. On March 2nd, 2009 DD45 passed by only 72,000 km away. Measuring some tens of meters in diameter, 2009 DD45 and 2009 FH are approximately Tunguska-class objects, meaning they pose no global threat but could cause local damage if they actually hit Earth. In years past, asteroids of this size often passed unnoticed, but recent improvements in asteroid surveys have resulted in growing numbers of space rocks caught in the act of near-Earth flybys.

14 March 2009

Renewed Interest in in Asteroid Defence 14MAR09

Near Miss Renews U.N. Interest in Asteroid Defence By Thalif Deen, Inter Press Service, http://www.ipsnews.net/news.asp?idnews=46089

NEO News (03/12/09) UN Report on NEO Threat Mitigation http://planetarydefense.blogspot.com/2009/03/neo-news-031209-un-report-on-neo-threat.html

NEO News (03/07/09) Newsworthy NEAs: 2009DD45 & 2008TN166http://planetarydefense.blogspot.com/2009/03/neo-news-030709-newsworthy-neas.html

Surprise Asteroid Buzzed Earth Monday, National Geographic, March 2, 2009, http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2009/03/090302-asteroid-earth.html

EDITORIAL COMMENT Cosmic Near-miss, Times of India,MArch 11, 2009http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/Opinion/EDITORIAL-COMMENT--Cosmic-Near-miss/articleshow/4253466.cms

Source: Paul Heinrich

02 March 2009

Near Earth Asteroid to Fly By Earth 2MAR09

Space Weather News for March 2, 2009
http://spaceweather.com
ASTEROID FLYBY:
There's no danger of a collision, but newly-discovered asteroid 2009 DD45 will come close enough today when it flies by our planet 72,000 km (0.00048 AU) away. That's only twice the height of a geostationary communications satellite. The asteroid measures 30 to 40 meters across, similar in size to the Tunguska impactor of 1908. Closest approach occurs at approximately 1340 UT (5:40 am PST) on March 2nd. Experienced amateur astronomers may be able to photograph the space rock shining like an 11th magnitude star as it races through the constellations Hydra and Virgo. The timing favors observers in Hawaii, Australia, New Zealand, Japan and east Asia.
Visit http://spaceweather.com for updates and ephemerides.

22 February 2009

First Tracked Rock Recovered in Sudan (Asteroid 2008 TC3) 21FEB09

http://www.newscientist.com/article/dn16635-first-tracked-space-rock-recovered-after-impact
First tracked space rock recovered after impact-0246 GMT on 7 October-Sudan (Asteroid 2008 TC3)
by David Shiga
New Scientist
February 19, 2009
The discovery of meteorites from an asteroid that exploded over Sudan in October completes an astronomical trifecta. For the first time, scientists have detected a space rock ahead of a collision with Earth, watched it streak through the atmosphere, and then recovered pieces of it. Analysis of the meteorites could shed light on conditions in the early solar system more than 4 billion years ago. When the asteroid, called 2008 TC3, was discovered on 6 October last year, it was just 20 hours away from hitting Earth. Though the warning period was short, it was the first time a space rock had been found before it impacted the planet. Orbital calculations predicted the object would plunge into the atmosphere above Sudan at 0246 GMT on 7 October, and it arrived right ontime. Observations suggested it was no more than 5 metres across, too small to survive intact all the way to the ground and cause damage. The brilliant fireball it made as it descended through the atmosphere was seen far in the distance by the crew of a KLM airliner, and was observed by various satellites, including a weather satellite called Meteosat-8. Now, a team of meteorite hunters has found fragments of the object. The meteorites are a unique group in that they come from an object seen hurtling through space before its plunge into Earth's atmosphere.

Numerous fragments
Students from the University of Khartoum, led by Dr Muawia Shaddad, found the first fragments using data provided by NASA to home in onwhere fragments were likely to be found. Scientists involved with the discovery, including Peter Jenniskens ofthe SETI Institute in Mountain View, California, have reportedly submitted a study about the find to a scientific journal, and have not responded to interview requests. But Lindley Johnson, head of NASA's Near-Earth Object Program office atthe agency's headquarters in Washington, DC, reported the find on Mondayin Vienna, at a United Nations meeting discussing near-Earth object (NEO) impacts. <http://www.oosa.unvienna.org/oosa/en/COPUOS/stsc/2009/index.html>

An image of the first fragment found is included in the slides from Johnson's presentation (pdf) <http://www.oosa.unvienna.org/pdf/pres/stsc2009/tech-25.pdf> (see slide 19).
Donald Yeomans, who manages NASA's efforts to find and track NEOs at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) in Pasadena, California, confirmed that"quite a few" fragments have been found but declined to discuss them further.

Weak material?
Before the fragments were found, meteorite expert Peter Brown of the University of Western Ontario in Canada said the asteroid was likely made of relatively weak material, given that 2008 TC3 broke up unusually quickly once it hit the atmosphere, exploding about 37 kilometres above ground. Another object known to have broken up at about this height scattered fragments over Tagish Lake in Canada in 2000. The Tagish Lake meteorites turned out to be made of a very crumbly material, and fall into a class of meteorites called carbonaceous chondrites, which have been modified little by heat or other processes since the solar system formed more than 4.5 billion years ago. "I would caution making direct compositional comparisons [with the Tagish Lake meteorites], but it does certainly underscore the global weakness of [2008 TC3]," Brown said in comments posted on the JPL website in November. He added that observations of the rock's quick breakup "all but rule out" a composition rich in iron. <http://neo.jpl.nasa.gov/news/2008tc3.html>

Point of origin
When the analysis of these rock fragments does come out, what is it likely to tell us? Meteorites in general provide a valuable record of conditions in the early solar system, such as temperature and chemical composition. And the 2008 TC3 meteorites could be especially illuminating because the parent object was observed in space before the breakup, allowing scientists to calculate its former orbit around the Sun. This provides precious information connecting the meteorites to their place of origin in the solar system. For most other meteorites, such calculations involve a lot of guesswork. Meteorites had previously been recovered after about 10 "fireball" events, where parent space rocks were observed streaking through the sky. But in those cases, scientists had to try to reconstruct the object's orbit based on its path through the atmosphere. "It's often very difficult to get from a streak in the sky to what theorbit was," says Allan Treiman of the Lunar and Planetary Institute in Tucson, Arizona. "But if they've got its location before it hit the atmosphere, they're far better off - that's really wonderful."

01 February 2009

CLUSTER MAP OF WHO IS WATCHING FROM WHERE










(Click on Photo for a better view)


CLUSTER MAP OF WHO IS WATCHING FROM WHERE 1FEB09

---Thank you ALL! 749 visitors, since 19JAN09, in 13 days!
United States (US)343
Germany (DE)72
Canada (CA)40
Italy (IT)37
Poland (PL)34
France (FR)28
Netherlands (NL)26
United Kingdom (GB)24
Japan (JP)20
Spain (ES)12
Morocco (MA)11
Sweden (SE)10
Luxembourg (LU)10
Australia (AU)9
Austria (AT)6
Switzerland (CH)6
Finland (FI)5
Belgium (BE)4
Russian Federation (RU)4
Czech Republic (CZ)4
Slovenia (SI)4
Philippines (PH)4
Mexico (MX)4
Bolivia (BO)3
Slovakia (SK)3
Europe (EU)3
Venezuela (VE)2
India (IN)2
Israel (IL)2
Romania (RO)2
Croatia (HR)2
Panama (PA)2
Iran, Islamic Republic of (IR)1
Hungary (HU)1
Estonia (EE)1
Costa Rica (CR)1
Denmark (DK)1
Ireland (IE)1
South Africa (ZA)1
Colombia (CO)1
Chile (CL)1
Thailand (TH)1
Taiwan (TW)1