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New asteroid discovery: a close approach to Earth

An asteroid discovered days ago will narrowly miss Earth

A recently discovered asteroid will make a relatively close approach to Earth this Monday, drawing the attention of astronomers and space agencies worldwide. Despite the short cosmic distance, experts emphasize that the object represents no danger to the planet and will safely continue its journey through space.

Astronomers are closely monitoring an asteroid known as 2026JH2, a rocky object expected to glide past Earth at an estimated distance of about 91,593 kilometers, roughly 56,900 miles. According to calculations from the European Space Agency, its trajectory will bring it to nearly one quarter of the usual gap between Earth and the moon, placing it among this year’s closest recorded asteroid flybys. Even so, researchers point out that it presents no risk of impact or atmospheric entry.

The asteroid was first observed on May 10 by researchers with the Mount Lemmon Survey in Tucson, Arizona, one of several programs dedicated to monitoring near-Earth objects, and once detected, it received the official designation 2026JH2 and was classified as part of the Apollo asteroid group, noted for having orbits that intersect Earth’s trajectory around the sun.

NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory projects that the asteroid is set to approach closest just before 6 p.m. Eastern Time, and although this may seem unnervingly near from a human viewpoint, astronomers emphasize that events like this occur fairly often across the vast expanse of the solar system.

Why experts believe there is nothing to worry about

Planetary scientists have reassured the public that the asteroid will safely miss Earth. Richard Binzel, a professor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and creator of the Torino Scale used to classify asteroid impact risks, explained that objects of similar size frequently pass between Earth and the moon without causing any issues.

Binzel observes that car-sized or small-bus-sized asteroids routinely pass through Earth’s cosmic neighborhood, and explains that what sets the present apart is that improved detection systems now enable astronomers to spot many of these bodies that once would have gone unnoticed.

At its closest pass, 2026JH2 will remain well beyond the altitude range where numerous geosynchronous satellites operate to support telecommunications, weather forecasting, and broadcasting, and specialists highlight that the object’s trajectory has been rigorously examined and does not intersect Earth’s orbit.

Experts believe the asteroid originated in the main asteroid belt between Mars and Jupiter, a region where collisions among rocky objects and Jupiter’s gravitational influence have long been known to push fragments inward, sending material into the inner solar system and giving rise to many of the near-Earth asteroids that astronomers track today.

Although this flyby poses no danger, the event underscores how vital ongoing monitoring efforts are for spotting potentially hazardous objects long before they pose any real threat.

The challenge of determining an asteroid’s exact size

Despite direct observations of 2026JH2, astronomers remain unable to pin down its exact size, with current scientific assessments placing its diameter somewhere between 15 and 30 meters, a range comparable to one or two school buses, yet this approximation stays ambiguous because telescopes that operate in visible light only register the object’s brightness.

Patrick Michel, an astrophysicist and research director at France’s National Centre for Scientific Research, explained that an asteroid’s brightness does not directly reveal its size. A darker object may appear faint even if it is relatively large, while a smaller but highly reflective asteroid could seem brighter.

Astronomers can gauge an object’s dimensions with greater accuracy when they gather infrared observations, because this type of data records heat signatures that align closely with the object’s true scale. However, carrying out infrared measurements from Earth is far more difficult, which means these readings are typically missing during the early identification of near‑Earth objects.

Scientists liken the smallest projected size of 2026JH2 to the meteor that detonated over Chelyabinsk, Russia, in 2013, an incident that sent a shockwave across the region, breaking windows and injuring more than 1,000 people. At the upper limit of current estimates, the asteroid may mirror the object tied to the 1908 Tunguska event in Siberia, which leveled extensive stretches of forest.

Researchers note, however, that these comparisons refer solely to scale rather than risk. In contrast to those past events, 2026JH2 is not expected to enter Earth’s atmosphere. Its trajectory ensures a secure distance from the planet, removing any chance of an airburst or ground collision.

Future asteroid tracking remains essential

Scientists remain confident that 2026JH2 currently poses no danger, yet experts admit that forecasting an asteroid’s long-term trajectory is inherently difficult, as orbital routes can shift over the years through gravitational pulls from planets and other cosmic objects.

Michel observed that although long-term trajectories can never be predicted with absolute certainty, current analyses indicate that no known asteroid poses a meaningful impact threat within the next hundred years. Planetary defense teams persistently track thousands of near-Earth objects to identify any potential shifts in their orbits.

The close flyby occurs at a time when planetary radar assets are far more limited than in past years. Jean-Luc Margot, a professor of planetary sciences at the University of California, Los Angeles, explained that the 2020 collapse of the Arecibo Observatory drastically reduced the scientific community’s radar observation capacity, and NASA’s Goldstone radar facility is also currently undergoing major repairs.

Without radar data, astronomers face greater challenges in pinpointing the exact shape, rotation, and trajectory of nearby asteroids, and although optical telescopes provide valuable information, radar instruments allow scientists to develop far more precise representations of an object’s movement and physical properties.

Margot explained that only a small fraction of near-Earth asteroids similar in size to 2026JH2 have been identified so far. Because many of these objects are relatively dark and small, they are often discovered only days before their closest approaches, once they become bright enough for survey telescopes to detect.

Space agencies and scientific organizations, compelled by this limitation, have expanded their funding for asteroid detection and tracking programs, and upcoming observatories together with more sophisticated sky surveys are expected to significantly elevate discovery rates in the next few years, giving researchers the means to assemble a far more thorough inventory of nearby objects.

A remarkable celestial spectacle is expected to unfold with the approach of Apophis

As 2026JH2 draws increasing attention for its close flyby, astronomers are already shifting their gaze toward an even more remarkable occurrence expected in 2029, when a significantly larger asteroid named Apophis is predicted to pass Earth at an even nearer distance on April 13 of that year.

Scientists estimate that Apophis will travel within approximately 32,000 kilometers of Earth, a distance closer than some satellites orbiting the planet. Despite the dramatic proximity, astronomers say there is no cause for alarm and instead describe the event as a unique scientific opportunity.

The anticipated Apophis flyby is positioned to become one of the most closely monitored asteroid encounters of modern times, and unlike 2026JH2, which will remain out of sight to the naked eye, Apophis is expected to be visible without telescopes from several regions across Europe, Africa, and the Middle East.

Events like these offer researchers valuable opportunities to study asteroid composition, movement, and structure while refining planetary defense strategies. Each close approach improves scientific understanding of how these objects behave and how humanity could respond if a future asteroid ever posed a genuine threat.

For now, astronomers say the passage of 2026JH2 serves primarily as a reminder of the dynamic nature of Earth’s cosmic environment. Small asteroids routinely move through the solar system, and thanks to improving technology, scientists are becoming increasingly capable of spotting them before they pass nearby.

A live broadcast of the asteroid’s arrival is expected to be shown by the Virtual Telescope Project via its observatories in Italy, giving astronomy fans worldwide the chance to watch the moment as it unfolds in real time. Even though the asteroid will be far too faint for most viewers to spot on their own, the close pass continues to spark public fascination with the countless objects that quietly move through the region of space surrounding Earth.

By Harper King

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