Asteroid 2014 R6

Last March I posted NOTES ON CLOSE ENCOUNTERS, describing some thumbnail math relating to the hyperbolic shape of an asteroid trajectory passing near the earth, as viewed in the earth frame of reference.

I noted that the encounter with asteroid 2014 DX110 had a very “flat” ( high eccentricity ) trajectory, based on the speed and near approach distance of 1.3125 and 54, expressed in units of earth escape velocity and earth radius. ( Not earth orbit radius! ) The rule-of-thumb eccentricity came to 185 in that case.

The predicted encounter with 2014 RC set for this Sunday has a much less “flat” flyby trajectory, based on the available graphic shown here:

asteroid20140903-640

From the graphic we have, in terms of my previous post, r0 = 25,000 mi = 6.3 ; v0 = 40000 km/hr = 1 ( i.e. very nearly earth escape velocity. ) So this is a lot closer and a little slower than 2014 DX110. Turning to the formula

s2 = r02 / ( 1 – 1/ ( r0 v02 ) )

… we get an “impact parameter” ( projected asymptotic approach distance ) of 1.09 r0, so 2014 R6 will actually be “drawn” about 9% closer by earth’s gravity, compared to a straight line fly-by, and the hyperbolic trajectory has an eccentricity of 11, versus 185 and a deviation of just 1/2 % in the case of 2014 DX110.

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