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Old November 2nd 11, 04:15 AM posted to sci.astro.amateur
Brad Guth[_3_]
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Default asteroid close approach, 2011 Nov 08

On Nov 1, 9:02*pm, Sam Wormley wrote:
On 11/1/11 8:42 PM, Brad Guth wrote:









On Nov 1, 5:11 pm, Chris L *wrote:
On Tue, 1 Nov 2011 14:02:28 -0700 (PDT), Brad Guth


*wrote:
It's actually kind of dark, and it'll likely get very close to our
moon, though perhaps passing more above than along side. *Of course
the only public shared data is from an old March 10th swag via JPL.
Let us all hope prey its trajectory hasn't shifted, because a lunar
impact would be extremely problematic for us.


The elements posted by JPL are current as of 2011-08-27. In any case,
this object will be a few hundred thousand kilometers from the Earth,
and there is nothing that could perturb the orbit of a body like this
enough to hit either the Moon or Earth in such a short time. And it's
doubtful that a body this size hitting the Moon would cause any
problems for the Earth at all.


This body is large enough to pick up easily with a backyard telescope-
calculate your own elements if you don't like the posted ones.


Any direct hit or glancing blow to the moon could be extremely
problematic for us, especially if it happened on the nearside.


* *Brad, get a life! Look at the path of 2005_YU55 with respect to
* *the Earth and Moon
* * *http://neo.jpl.nasa.gov/images/2005_...oach_movie.gif


Are you jacking off, again?

Do all ZNRs ?????

Are you and your parrot friends taking credit for this one missing our
moon?

What about the next one, and the thousand others after that? (are you
going to take credit for each of those missing us?)

Are you also going to take full credit and responsibility for the ones
that do not miss us or the moon?

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