Potentially Hazardous Asteroid (612356) 2002 JX8 close encounter: a new image – 5 May 2025.
We did follow-up observations of the Potentially Hazardous Asteroid (612356) 2002 JX8, slowly approaching our planet: on 9 May 2025, it will safely come as close as 4.2 millions of km from us, 10.9 times the average lunar distance. We will show it live!
The image above comes from a single 120-second exposure, remotely taken with the “Elena” (PlaneWave 17″ + Paramount MEII + SBIG STL-6303E) robotic unit available as part of the Virtual Telescope Project. The telescope tracked the apparent motion of the asteroid, so it looks like a sharp dot of light, marked with a white arrow, while stars show as short trails. A bright (63%) Moon was high in the sky.
At the imaging time, potentially hazardous asteroid (612356) 2002 JX8 was at about 4.4 million of km from us and safely approaching. At the imaging time, the asteroid was shining at mag. 16.1 or so.
This 230 – 510 meters large asteroid will reach its minimum distance (about 4.2 millions of km, 10.9 times the average lunar distance) from us on 9 May 2025, at 11:02 UTC (source: Nasa/JPL). Of course, there are no risks at all for our planet.
We will show asteroid 2002 JX8 live, online, on 8 May 2025: join the live feed here!
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