• Earth may have captured a stray 60s-era rocket booster

    From RS Wood@21:1/5 to All on Tue Nov 17 11:50:36 2020
    From the «7 billion pieces of space junk remaining» department:
    Title: Earth May Have Captured A Stray 1960s-Era Rocket Booster
    Author: Fnord666
    Date: Sat, 14 Nov 2020 16:03:00 -0500
    Link: https://soylentnews.org/article.pl?sid=20/11/14/1651257&from=rss

    Arthur T Knackerbracket has found the following story[1]:

    Earth has captured a tiny object from its orbit around the sun and will keep
    it as a temporary satellite for a few months before it escapes back to a
    solar orbit. But the object is likely not an asteroid; it's probably the Centaur upper stage rocket booster that helped lift NASA's ill-fated Surveyor
    2 spacecraft toward the moon in 1966.

    This story of celestial catch-and-release begins with the detection of an unknown object by the NASA-funded Pan-STARRS1 survey telescope on Maui in September. Astronomers at Pan-STARRS noticed that this object followed a
    slight but distinctly curved path in the sky, which is a sign of its
    proximity to Earth. The apparent curvature is caused by the rotation of the observer around Earth's axis as our planet spins. Assumed to be an asteroid orbiting the sun, the object was given a standard designation by the Minor Planet Center in Cambridge, Massachusetts: 2020 SO. But scientists at the Center for Near-Earth Object Studies (CNEOS) at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Southern California saw the object's orbit and suspected it was not a normal asteroid.

    Most asteroids' orbits are more elongated and tilted relative to Earth's
    orbit. But the orbit of 2020 SO around the sun was very similar to that of Earth: It was at about the same distance, nearly circular, and in an orbital plane that almost exactly matched that of our planet—highly unusual for a natural asteroid.

    As astronomers at Pan-STARRS and around the world made additional
    observations of 2020 SO, the data also started to reveal the degree to which the sun's radiation was changing 2020 SO's trajectory—an indication that it may not be an asteroid after all.

    [...] Before it leaves, 2020 SO will make two large loops around our planet, with its closest approach on Dec. 1. During this period, astronomers will get
    a closer look and study its composition using spectroscopy to confirm if 2020 SO is indeed an artifact from the early Space Age.

    ------------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Original Submission[2]

    Read more of this story[3] at SoylentNews.

    Links:
    [1]: https://phys.org/news/2020-11-earth-captured-stray-1960s-era-rocket.html (link)
    [2]: http://soylentnews.org/submit.pl?op=viewsub&subid=45456 (link)
    [3]: https://soylentnews.org/article.pl?sid=20/11/14/1651257&from=rss (link)


    --
    Port 80 is overrated.

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  • From JAB@21:1/5 to rsw@therandymon.com on Tue Nov 17 10:09:22 2020
    On Tue, 17 Nov 2020 11:50:36 -0000 (UTC), RS Wood
    <rsw@therandymon.com> wrote:

    the sun's radiation was changing 2020 SO's trajectory

    Just those "mass less" photons "kicking butt."

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