About the size of five football fields, Asteroid 2004 BL86 will woosh by Earth Monday at an extraordinarily close — but safe — distance of 745,000 miles. That’s about three trips from our blue marble to the moon.
Although its path won’t bring it anywhere near a collision course with Earth, it’s special in that it’s the closest any known space rock this big will fly past Earth until asteroid 1999 AN10 in 2027, according to NASA, and it’s the closest this asteroid will be for at least the next 200 years.
Animation by NASA / JPL
Amateur astronomers with small telescopes or strong binoculars and a clear sky are expected to be able to see the asteroid pass by, which was discovered in 2004.
“When we get our radar data back the day after the flyby, we will have the first detailed images,” said radar astronomer Lance Benner of NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory. “At present, we know almost nothing about the asteroid, so there are bound to be surprises.”
Slooh.com is making the livecast available. From the organization’s website: “Slooh will broadcast the event live from telescopes situated in Australia. The image stream will be accompanied by discussions led by Slooh host Will Gater, Slooh astronomer Bob Berman, and special guests including Dr. Paul Chodas, manager of JPL’S Near-Earth Object Program Office, and Dr. Lance Benner, NASA Research Scientist. Viewers can follow updates on the show and ask questions to be answered live on air by using the Twitter hashtag #SloohBL86.“