Earth Dodges a Bullet — New Radar Images of Asteroid 2014 SC324

2014SC324_oct25Goldstone.jpg

Looks like we dodged a bullet. A bullet-shaped asteroid that is. The 70-meter Goldstone radar dish, part of NASA's

Deep Space Network

, grabbed a collage of photos of Earth-approaching asteroid 2014 SC324 during its

close flyby

last Friday October 24. These are the first-ever photos of the space rock which was discovered September 30 this year by the

Mt. Lemmon Survey

. The level of detail is amazing considering that the object is only about 197 feet (60-meters) across.

You can also see how incredibly fast it's rotating - about 30-45 minutes for a one spin.

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A cropped version of the photo to more clearly see the asteroid's shape. 2014 SC324 passed just 1.5 lunar distances from Earth last week. Credit: NASA/JPL[/caption]

In the cropped version, the shape is somewhat clearer with the asteroid appearing some four times longer than wide. 2014 SC324 belongs to the Apollo asteroid class, named for

1862 Apollo

discovered in 1932 by German astronomer Karl Reinmuth. Apollo asteroids follow orbits that occasionally cross that of Earth's, making them a potential threat to our planet. The famed February 15, 2013

Chelyabinsk fireball

, with an approximate pre-atmospheric entry size of 59 feet (18-m), belonged to the Apollo class.

[caption id="attachment_115870" align="aligncenter" width="580"]

Three classes of asteroids that pass near Earth or cross its orbit are named for the first member discovered — Apollo, Aten and Amor. Apollo asteroids like 2014 SC324 routinely cross Earth's orbit, Atens also cross but have different orbital characteristics and Amors cross Mars' orbit but miss Earth's. Credit: ESA[/caption]

Lance Benner and colleagues at Goldstone also imaged another Apollo asteroid that passed through our neighborhood on October 19 called

2014 SM143

. This larger object, estimated at around 650 feet (200-m) across, was discovered with the

Pan-STARRS 1 telescope

on Mt. Haleakala in Hawaii on September 17. Tell me we're not some shiny ball on a solar system-sized pool table where the players fortunately miss their shot ... most of the time.