The jig may be up for an âasteroidâ thatâs expected to get nabbed by Earthâs gravity and become a mini moon next month.
Instead of a cosmic rock, the newly discovered object appears to be an old rocket from a failed moon-landing mission 54 years ago thatâs finally making its way back home, according to NASA’s leading asteroid expert. Observations should help nail its identity.
âIâm pretty jazzed about this,â Paul Chodas told The Associated Press. âItâs been a hobby of mine to find one of these and draw such a link, and Iâve been doing it for decades now.â
Chodas speculates that asteroid 2020 SO, as it is formally known, is actually the Centaur upper rocket stage that successfully propelled NASAâs Surveyor 2 lander to the moon in 1966 before it was discarded. The lander ended up crashing into the moon after one of its thrusters failed to ignite on the way there. The rocket, meanwhile, swept past the moon and into orbit around the sun as intended junk, never to be seen again â until perhaps now.
A telescope in Hawaii last month discovered the mystery object heading our way while doing a search intended to protect our planet from doomsday rocks. The object promptly was added to the International Astronomical Unionâs Minor Planet Centerâs tally of asteroids and comets found in our solar system, just 5,000 shy of the 1 million mark.
The object is estimated to be roughly 26 feet (8 meters) based on its brightness. Thatâs in the ballpark of the old Centaur, which would be less than 32 feet (10 meters) long including its engine nozzle and 10 feet (3 meters) in diameter.
What caught Chodasâ attention is that its near-circular orbit around the sun is quite similar to Earthâs â unusual for an asteroid.
âFlag number one,” said Chodas, who is director of the Center for Near-Earth Object Studies at NASAâs Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Southern California.
The object is also in the same plane as Earth, not tilted above or below, another red flag. Asteroids usually zip by at odd angles. Lastly, itâs approaching Earth at 1,500 mph (2,400 kph), slow by asteroid standards.
As the object gets closer, astronomers should be able to better chart its orbit and determine how much itâs pushed around by the radiation and thermal effects of sunlight. If itâs an old Centaur â essentially a light empty can â it will move differently than a heavy space rock less susceptible to outside forces.
Thatâs how astronomers normally differentiate between asteroids and space junk like abandoned rocket parts, since both appear merely as moving dots in the sky. There likely are dozens of fake asteroids out there, but their motions are too imprecise or jumbled to confirm their artificial identity, said Chodas.
Sometimes itâs the other way around.
A mystery object in 1991, for example, was determined by Chodas and others to be a regular asteroid rather than debris, even though its orbit around the sun resembled Earthâs.
Even more exciting, Chodas in 2002 found what he believes was the leftover Saturn V third stage from 1969âČs Apollo 12, the second moon landing by NASA astronauts. He acknowledges the evidence was circumstantial, given the objectâs chaotic one-year orbit around Earth. It never was designated as an asteroid, and left Earth’s orbit in 2003.
The latest objectâs route is direct and much more stable, bolstering his theory.
âI could be wrong on this. I donât want to appear overly confident,â Chodas said. âBut itâs the first time, in my view, that all the pieces fit together with an actual known launch.”
And he’s happy to note that it’s a mission that he followed in 1966, as a teenager in Canada.
Asteroid hunter Carrie Nugent of Olin College of Engineering in Needham, Massachusetts, said Chodasâ conclusion is âa good oneâ based on solid evidence. Sheâs the author of the 2017 book âAsteroid Hunters.â
âSome more data would be useful so we can know for sure,â she said in an email. âAsteroid hunters from around the world will continue to watch this object to get that data. Iâm excited to see how this develops!â
The Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics’ Jonathan McDowell noted there have been âmany, many embarrassing incidents of objects in deep orbit … getting provisional asteroid designations for a few days before it was realized they were artificial.â
It’s seldom clear-cut.
Last year, a British amateur astronomer, Nick Howes, announced that an asteroid in solar orbit was likely the abandoned lunar module from NASA’s Apollo 10, a rehearsal for the Apollo 11 moon landing. While this object is likely artificial, Chodas and others are skeptical of the connection.
Skepticism is good, Howes wrote in an email. âIt hopefully will lead to more observations when itâs next in our neck of the woodsâ in the late 2030s.
Chodas’ latest target of interest was passed by Earth in their respective laps around the sun in 1984 and 2002. But it was too dim to see from 5 million miles (8 million kilometers) away, he said.
He predicts the object will spend about four months circling Earth once itâs captured in mid-November, before shooting back out into its own orbit around the sun next March.
Chodas doubts the object will slam into Earth â âat least not this time around.â
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