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Near-Earth asteroid discovered from Calar Alto Observatory


teaserAsteroid 2009 DS36 was discovered from Calar Alto Observatory (Spain) in the morning of February 25th 2009. Its fast motion on the sky suggested that it had to be located not too far away from Earth and indeed the preliminary orbit shows that this is a Near-Earth Object (NEO), the first object of this class discovered from Calar Alto. Its estimated diameter is around 15 meters.

 

2009 DS36 was discovered passing in front of the constellation Leo, not far away from the direction towards the sigma Leonis star. The discoverer was astronomer Felix Hormuth, from the Max-Planck Institute for Astronomy (Heidelberg) currently working at Calar Alto Observatory. In Hormuth's words, "It was pretty fast -- and left nice trails on a set ofneo_caha_small three long exposures originally obtained to confirm some of last night's mainbelt asteroid discoveries."

 

The telescope used for this study was the 1.23 m Zeiss telescope of Calar Alto. The discovery report, observations, and preliminary orbit can be found at the Minor Planet Center Electronic Circulars. Most asteroids follow orbits located between Mars and Jupiter. But a certain quantity of them run along paths that bring them close to Earth. These asteroids, and several comets with similar behaviour, are collectively known as Near-Earth Objects (NEOs). 2009 DS36 was found almost exactly when it was at its closest approach to Earth, at 7 000 000 km (18 times the distance Earth-Moon). Its physical size is estimated around 15 metres.

 

neo_orbit_small

 

The object will be followed from Calar Alto and from many other observatories around the world, in order to improve its orbital parameters.

 

Full resolution images:

 

Discovery image of asteroid 2009 DS36 obtained by Felix Hormuth with the Zeiss 1.23 m telescope of Calar Alto Observatory the 25th of February 2009. (960 K)

 

One more image of asteroid 2009 DS36 obtanied by Felix Hormuth with the same telescope, some minutes later. (970 K)

 

Orbit diagram showing the Sun and the orbit of the Earth (blue), and planets Mercury (green), Venus (yellow) and Mars (red). The orbit of asteroid 2009 DS36 is depicted in purple. (Orbit diagram generated with Easysky.) (300 K)

 

  © Calar Alto Observatory, February 2009                 This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.

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Centro Astronómico Hispano en Andalucía
Observatorio de Calar Alto
Sierra de los Filabres
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info@caha.es

Carl Sagan

Somos polvo de estrellas, buscando en el firmamento las respuestas que el universo tiene guardadas para nosotros. La astronomía es el arte de desvelar los secretos del cosmos, y cada noche, al observar el cielo, nos acercamos un poco más a nuestro lugar en el infinito.

Carl Sagan
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