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When it was first found, we didn't know the orbit:
Originally posted by YoungMind92
If it was found in September 2010 why is that we only hear about it now?.
Dr. Asher said:
Not knowing precisely the location of a newly-discovered NEA is quite common. The only way to eliminate the uncertainty is to keep tracking the asteroid for as long as possible, usually months or years.
Originally posted by Arbitrageur
When it was first found, we didn't know the orbit:
Originally posted by YoungMind92
If it was found in September 2010 why is that we only hear about it now?.
Asteroid 2010 S016
Dr. Asher said:
Not knowing precisely the location of a newly-discovered NEA is quite common. The only way to eliminate the uncertainty is to keep tracking the asteroid for as long as possible, usually months or years.
That site also has an animation of the orbit, but I really don't understand it so if anyone can explain it please do. First, look at the animation:
[atsimg]http://files.abovetopsecret.com/images/member/eef68c15bc6c.gif[/atsimg]
It shows the rock almost catching up with the Earth, then being flung around "backwards".
Now I could understand this better if it actually caught up to the Earth, went a little past it, then I could see perfectly how the Earth's gravity might fling it around backwards just as shown in the animation. But I'm not really seeing how the interaction works if it never catches up with the Earth. I read several articles, but none really explain it too well, so if anyone can clarify that, I'd appreciate it.
It seems like it turns around and does a near 180 degree turn to go in the opposite direction, but I don't see what's pulling on it in the opposite direction to make it do that.edit on 7-4-2011 by Arbitrageur because: clarification
So it doesn't really have a horseshoe orbit from outside Earth's perspective, that makes a lot more sense.
Originally posted by RadicalRebel
It only has a horseshoe orbit when observed from earth.
That's the same illustration as in the research paper. It looks odd because it's plotted in the ecliptic coordinate system.
Originally posted by Illustronic
They really shouldn't have used that illustration with respect to the sun, must be an editors 'artistic license' to make a point.
Star for that animation!
Originally posted by Illustronic
But this JPL illustration puts it all into perspective.
ssd.jpl.nasa.gov...