Discovery[1] | |
---|---|
Discovered by | Pan-STARRS (F51) |
Discovery date | 11 January 2015 |
Designations | |
2015 AZ43 | |
Orbital characteristics[2] | |
Epoch 13 January 2016 (JD 2457400.5) | |
Uncertainty parameter 5 | |
Observation arc | 45 days |
Aphelion | 2.75773 AU (412.551 Gm) (Q) |
Perihelion | 0.98830226 AU (147.847914 Gm) (q) |
1.87301 AU (280.198 Gm) (a) | |
Eccentricity | 0.472347 (e) |
2.56 yr (936.29 d) | |
123.5461° (M) | |
0° 23m 4.187s / day (n) | |
Inclination | 4.52198° (i) |
337.42980° (Ω) | |
181.78786° (ω) | |
Earth MOID | 0.00161778 AU (242,016 km) |
Jupiter MOID | 2.23908 AU (334.962 Gm) |
Physical characteristics | |
Dimensions | |
0.59992 h (35.995 min) | |
23.5[2] | |
2015 AZ43 (also written 2015 AZ43) is an Apollo near-Earth asteroid roughly 70 meters in diameter. On 10 February 2015 with a 29.5-day observation arc, it showed a 1 in 5,880 chance of impacting Earth on 27 February 2107.[3] However, the NEODyS nominal best-fit orbit shows that 2015 AZ43 will be 2.8 AU (420,000,000 km; 260,000,000 mi) from Earth on 27 February 2107.[5] A (non-impacting) Earth close approach in 2056 makes future trajectories diverge.[6] It was removed from the JPL Sentry Risk Table on 23 February 2015 using JPL solution 26 with an observation arc of 40 days that included radar data.[7]
With an absolute magnitude of 23.5,[2] the asteroid is about 50–120 meters in diameter.[4]
MPEC2015-B05
was invoked but never defined (see the help page).jpldata
was invoked but never defined (see the help page).summary
was invoked but never defined (see the help page).h
was invoked but never defined (see the help page).NEODyS2107
was invoked but never defined (see the help page).NEO-close
was invoked but never defined (see the help page).removed
was invoked but never defined (see the help page).