Categories: Science

First Asteroid to Buzz Earth in 2023 Came Closer Than Many Satellites

Space may be vast, but it definitely isn’t empty, especially around Earth. 
NASA

An asteroid passed by closer to Earth this month than most large telecom satellites, and our telescopes didn’t spot the space rock until it already had us in its rear view.

Asteroid 2023 AV was spotted by the Catalina Sky Survey in Arizona on Jan. 13, a day after it made its flyby, passing just 5,704 miles (9,180 kilometers) above Earth’s surface. For context, geosynchronous orbits — “sweet spots” where many communications satellites reside — are over 22,000 miles (35,000 kilometers) in altitude. 

2023 AV is somewhere between the size of a golf cart and small pick-up truck at 6 to 15 feet (2 to 5 meters), which is quite small and non-threatening by asteroid and near-Earth object standards. Based on previous experience, if an asteroid this size were to actually impact Earth as some have in the recent past, it would very likely burn up in the atmosphere — keeping us Earthlings safe, but possibly producing a spectacular fireball in the process. 

For instance, the bolide that exploded in the atmosphere over Russia in 2013 was probably about 10 times the size of 2023 AV, yet  only a small boulder-size piece made it all the way to the surface. 

This marks the first asteroid to be discovered flying past Earth closer than the moon in 2023, and it also happens to be the 17th closest asteroid visit in records that go all the way back to 1901. Another, larger asteroid (2023 AC1) also came closer to us than the orbit of the moon just hours later, but it was well over 100,000 miles away from the surface. 

Asteroids Above Us

  • Giant Asteroid Hurtling Toward Earth! How to Know If the Risk Is Real
  • ‘Planet Killer’ Asteroid Found Hiding in Sun’s Glare Poses No Risk Anytime Soon
  • Newly Discovered Asteroid Is a Weird ‘Mini Moon’ on a 200-Year Visit to Earth

There’s no reason to worry about smallish asteroids like these. The bigger risk comes from larger objects that we’ve yet to discover, particularly those that approach our planet from the direction of the sun where we have a glaring (literally) blind spot. 

Upcoming missions like NASA’s NEO Surveyor aim to give us new eyes in space to be better prepared. 

Share

Recent Posts

Fox News AI Newsletter: Hegseth moves to revolutionize American warfighting

IN TODAY’S NEWSLETTER: - Pentagon launches military AI platform powered by Google Gemini for defense…

16 hours ago

Third-party breach exposes ChatGPT account details

ChatGPT went from novelty to necessity in less than two years. It is now part…

19 hours ago

Android Emergency Live Video gives 911 eyes on the scene

Holiday travel and winter storms create risky moments for drivers and families. Stress rises fast…

24 hours ago

Malicious browser extensions hit 4.3M users

A long-running malware campaign quietly evolved over several years and turned trusted Chrome and Edge…

2 days ago

Google’s new Call Reason feature marks calls as urgent

Sometimes you need someone to answer right away. Maybe you are locked out. Maybe those…

2 days ago

3D printed cornea restores sight in world first

Surgeons at Rambam Eye Institute have made medical history. They restored sight to a legally…

3 days ago