The object, a car-size asteroid called CD3, won’t be here for long, and new telescopes will help us spot more of these objects.


About 4 am on Feb. (at the Mount Lemmon Observatory, 9, feet above Tucson, two astronomers from the Catalina Sky Survey , Kacper Wierzchos and Theodore Pruyne, watched as their computer screens registered a dot moving against a static background of stars. “It didn’t seem to be any different than the other near- Earth asteroids that we discover, ”Dr. Wierzchos said, “except that it was found to be orbiting Earth instead of the sun.” “They are orbiting roughly the same space that we are, and some will get into the right spot where it can nudge into a ballet with us. And then it’s like any dance: you do a couple spins together, and go your separate ways, ”she says. “There’s something beautifully transient about it.” It might be the size of a small car. “It would probably fit in a bedroom, even in San Francisco or New York,” says Alessondra Springmann, an astronomer at the University of Arizona. . At any given time, the Earth probably hosts a mini-moon two feet across, and every decade or so it captures a moonlet as large as CD3, Dr. Fedorets said. – inch telescope of the Catalina Sky Survey on Mount Lemmon near Tucson, Ariz., which observed the 2400 CD3 object. Credit … (Travis Deyoe / Mount Lemmon SkyCenter / University of Arizona.)
Some amateur objective said CD3 might also be space junk. But a piece of rocket would move differently through space, Dr. Chodas says.
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