Asteroid to pass close to the Earth today

Pan-STARRS1
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An asteroid discovered by the University of Hawaii’s Pan-STARRS1 telescope atop Haleakala will make a close pass of Earth today.

At its closest point, the asteroid will be only about 1.7 times the distance of the Moon.

The asteroid has been given the temporary name 2020 OO1.

It has a diameter of approximately 65 feet — the length of about two school buses — and is similar in size to the asteroid that exploded in the atmosphere over Russia in 2013 that sent a shock wave that blew out the windows of 7,200 buildings across six Russian cities.

A short time after the July 20 discovery of 2020 OO1, the Center for Near-Earth Object Studies at NASA issued a notification that it would likely come close to Earth.

Several telescopes around the world — including the Canada-France-Hawaii Telescope on Maunakea — assisted with rapid followup observations to verify the asteroid’s orbit and determine if it was possibly hazardous.

“Pan-STARRS1 is the world leader in finding large near-earth objects, and this recent discovery is the latest example of the fundamental role Hawaii astronomy plays in the nation’s planetary defense system,” according to a news release from the University of Hawaii.

“Finding these objects is the bread-and-butter work of Pan-STARRS,” said UH Institute for Astronomy astronomer Richard Wainscoat, who leads the near-earth object project with Pan-STARRS. “Our mission is to find potentially hazardous asteroids together with the larger telescopes on Maunakea, the LCO (Las Cumbres Observatory) global telescope network, and our ATLAS (Asteroid Terrestrial-impact Last Alert System) project.”

After Pan-STARRS identifies an object that might be passing very close, telescopes on Maunakea and elsewhere will stop what they are working on and track the object to determine if it is a possible threat to Earth.

In this case, with all of the additional observations, including some taken by Hawaii high school students, astronomers have pinned down the orbit of 2020 OO1. The object has a tiny probability of hitting Earth in 2087.

Astronomers will continue to observe this object as it approaches in order to refine their projections. These new observations will likely rule out future impacts.