A mini moonthat will bid farewell to Earth soon may in fact be illustrated eroticisma small hunk of the big moon— the one that has loomed far longer in the sky than humans have roamed the planet.
A follow-up study has taken a closer look at the bus-sized spacerock to better understand what it's made of, how fast it's spinning, and where it's traveling. A team of researchers says the mini moon is something in between an S-type asteroid, made of silicates and metal, and a V-type like Vesta, the second-largest object in the main asteroid belt.
Though the results were not conclusive, they suggest the mini moon, officially referred to as 2024 PT5, has a lunar origin, closely matching powder collected by the Soviet Union's robotic Luna 24 mission in 1976, followed by samples from NASA's Apollo 12 mission in 1969. Both of those specimens came from maria, dark shadowy-looking lunar regions of ancient hardened lava flows.
The paper, whose authors include the two astronomers who discovered the mini moonin August, proposes that 2024 PT5 may have emerged from craters formed during the past 1 million years or so. The manuscript is under peer reviewfor publication in Astronomy & Astrophysics Letters.
SEE ALSO: NASA finds Earth's moon didn't need hundreds of years to form. Try hours.Asteroid 2024 PT5, which is making a complete spin every hour, has flown partially around Earth since Sept. 29 and will make its departure on Nov. 25, according to the manuscript. Since its arrival, the visitor has caused a nerd maelstrom, with many people arguing that calling such a small, Johnny-come-lately rock a moon is a misnomer. Even celebrity space communicator Neil deGrasse Tyson weighed in on the controversy, calling the mini-moon label "click bait."
Despite that debate, Carlos de la Fuente Marcos, one of the discoverers based at the Universidad Complutense de Madrid in Spain, is comfortable with the term, citing literature to support its usage in his papers.
"What we have here is a typical example of using different scientific criteria," he told Mashable. "It is a temporarily captured satellite of Earth, call it a mini moon if you like."
What is clear is that asteroids are influenced by Earth's gravity in this way fairly often, and the vast majority fly by without completing a full trip. Most are suspected to come from the so-called Arjuna asteroid belt, a group of rocks concentrated near Earth that was discovered in the early 1990s.
These asteroids complete one revolution around the sunevery year, and the Earth and moon actually travel through the middle of that belt, de la Fuente Marcos said. In fact, rock captures from the group may be so probable that this specific object may become a mini moon again in the future.
But compared to mini moons of the recent past, 2024 PT5 is a short-timer. In July 2006, a visitor dubbed RH120stayed in orbit around Earth for a year before getting flung out in July 2007. Astronomers believe one that left in May 2020 could have been sweeping around the planet for several years.
Despite their frequency, mini-moon episodes should not be scoffed at as ordinary, said Antonio Maudes, CEO of Light Bridges, which manages several robotic telescopes in Spain's Canary Islands. His company's Two-meter Twin Telescope provided observational data for the research team.
"You will probably not find more interesting objects than these ones in the solar system because they are so close to Earth, and they will come back," he told Mashable. "That's cool."
The company is developing a project in Spain dedicated to monitoring cislunar space, the region around Earth and themoon. Its purpose is to increase astronomers' statistical understanding of mini moons' origins, orbits, materials, and rotational speeds. Such information is not just helpful for looking out for potentially hazardous rocksthat could smash into Earth. Maudes thinks it could be useful for commercial exploits, too.
"Call it a mini moon if you like."
Venture capitalists have been buzzing for some time about a burgeoning industry of space-miningfor valuable minerals. The Arjuna asteroids are much closer than those in the main asteroid belt, between Mars and Jupiter, perhaps making them more practical destinations.Adolfo Nemirovsky, a physicist and adviser to Light Bridges, likens these nearby asteroids to Home Depot — relatively convenient places for picking up materials to build moon bases and supply space missions.
Although 2024 PT5 is on its way out now, many astronomers are grateful that it opened the public's eyes to the reality that a lot of stuff is whizzing around the world all the time.
"You feel that it's an empty space between here and the moon, and there is nothing there — it's not at all like that," Maudes said. "There are a lot of different forces at play here."
NASA plans to observe 2024 PT5with the Goldstone Solar System Radar in California in January 2025. At that point, the object will be very distant — about five times farther than themoon, roughly 239,000 miles away— before continuing on its trajectory around the sun.
Topics NASA
Netherlands vs. Spain 2025 livestream: Watch UEFA Nations League for freeLeBron James song edit trend is taking over TikTokHere's when astronauts Butch and Suni are expected to splash down todayGoogle's new AI model is being used to remove image watermarksFree Rita's Italian Ice: How to get free Italian Ice on March 20Save 50% on Target Circle 360 annual membershipsTesla recalls nearly all of its Cybertrucks yet againTesla is somehow missing $1.4 billionPixel 9a vs Pixel 9: What are the differences?Peru vs. Bolivia 2025 livestream: Watch World Cup Qualifiers for freeBest headphones deal: Save $71.99 on Sony WHSamsung One UI 7 set to release soon. Everything we know.Wordle today: The answer and hints for March 18, 2025How to protect your mental health while using dating appsEarly Tesla investor calls for Elon Musk to resign amid stock slumpAmazon Fire 7 Kids tablet deal: $69.99Best Apple deal: Save $50 on 11How to unblock XVideos for freeBest Garmin deal: Get $50 off the Garmin Forerunner 265SPebble smartwatches are coming, but they won't get along with the iPhone Antifascism and the Left’s Fear of Power Attorney-Tyrant Privilege The Tragedy of the Commons Othering the Godman Hockey Sausage In Praise of Negative Reviews Love, Actually Another Sorry Snob Watch Rocket Lab try to catch a booster as it falls back to Earth At the Columbia University Strike #churchtoo The National Hologram The Lunatic Face of Fiction The Zuckerberg Follies Discover Weakly Vanity Foul A Faster Horse? Fresh Hell Bankers’ Robberies Brand on the Run
3.3137s , 10221.78125 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【illustrated eroticism】,Exquisite Information Network