Astronomy:2002 MN

From HandWiki
Short description: Risk–listed near-Earth asteroid
2002 MN
Discovery[1][2]
Discovered byMIT Lincoln Laboratory
Discovery date17 June 2002
Designations
Minor planet category
Orbital characteristics[3]
Epoch 13 January 2016 (JD 2457400.5)
Uncertainty parameter 6
Observation arc53 days
|{{{apsis}}}|helion}}2.7189 astronomical unit|AU (406.74 Gm)
|{{{apsis}}}|helion}}0.91052 AU (136.212 Gm)
1.8147 AU (271.48 Gm)
Eccentricity0.49825
Orbital period2.44 yr (892.90 d)
Mean anomaly213.98°
Mean motion0° 24m 11.448s / day
Inclination1.0490°
Longitude of ascending node85.2787°
131.479°
Earth MOID0.000521686 AU (78,043.1 km)
Jupiter MOID2.25224 AU (336.930 Gm)
Physical characteristics
Dimensions~73 meters (240 ft)[4]
(assumed)[lower-alpha 1]
Mass5.4×108 kg
Absolute magnitude (H)23.6[3]


2002 MN is the provisional designation given to a 73-meter Apollo near-Earth asteroid that on 14 June 2002 passed Earth at a distance of 0.0008 astronomical unit|AU (120,000 km; 74,000 mi),[3] about one third the distance to the Moon (0.3 LD).[5] The close approach was second only to the Earth approach by the 10-meter asteroid 1994 XM1.[5] 2002 MN was discovered on 17 June 2002, three days after closest approach.[1] Its mass and relative velocity were in the same general range as the object ascribed to the Tunguska event of 1908, which leveled over 2,100 km2 (800 sq mi) of trees in Siberia. 2002 MN has an observation arc of 53 days with an uncertainty parameter of 6.[3] There is a cumulative 1 in 360,000 chance that the asteroid could impact Earth sometime after 2070.[4]


Notes

  1. Diameter estimate based on an assumed albedo of 0.15.

References

External links

Preceded by
2002 JE9
Large NEO Earth close approach
(inside the orbit of the Moon)

14 June 2002
Succeeded by
(308635) 2005 YU55