Here's a photo of Asteroid 4179 Toutatis taken by the China
National Space Administration:
Photo courtesy CNSA
A new video captures the giant asteroid 4179 Toutatis tumbling
through space on its flyby of Earth.
The asteroid Toutatis video, which is
about 40 seconds long, combines 64 radar images taken Wednesday and Thursday
(Dec. 12 and 13) by NASA's Deep Space Network antenna in Goldstone, Calif. On
those days, Toutatis was about 4.3 million miles (7 million kilometers) from
Earth, or about 18 times farther away than the moon is.
The new radar images — which
have a resolution of 12 feet (3.75 meters) per pixel — show the 3-mile-wide (5
kilometers) asteroid in striking detail. Toutatis is
revealed to be an elongated, irregularly shaped object with multiple ridges,
researchers said. Strange bright glints may indicate surface boulders, they
added.
The video also sheds light on
how Toutatis moves. The asteroid spins about its long axis every 5.4 days and
wobbles through space like a badly thrown football, scientists said.
Toutatis never posed a threat to Earth on its recent flyby, and researchers
say there is no chance it will hit our planet over the next four centuries or
so. (Beyond that time, the asteroid's orbit cannot be accurately computed.)
Nevertheless, the Minor
Planet Center in Cambridge, Mass., lists Toutatis as a potentially hazardous
object, meaning that it could pose a risk to Earth at some point in the future.
Toutatis would cause
catastrophic damage if it ever did slam into Earth, potentially extinguishing
humanity and many other species. In general, scientists think a strike by
anything at least 0.6 miles (1 km) wide could have global consequences, most
likely by altering the world's climate for many years to come.
For comparison, the asteroid
thought to have wiped out the dinosaurs 65 million years ago was an estimated 6
miles (10 km) across.
Asteroid Toutatis makes one
trip around the sun every four years. Its next close encounter with Earth will
come in November 2069, when the space rock will fly safely by at about 1.8
million miles (3 million km), or 7.7 Earth-moon distances.
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