The third near-earth asteroid of 2011 will pass between the moon and earth later this year, NASA has confirmed.
The 1300-foot-wide  (400 metres) asteroid, which is more than one and a  half times the length of a soccer pitch, will pass within 0.85 lunar  distances of the Earth on November 8, 2011.
 Discovered on December 28, 2005 by Robert McMillan of the Spacewatch  Program near Tucson, Arizona, 2005 YU55 is believed to be a very dark,  nearly spherical object.
 According to NASA’s Near Earth Object Program:  “Although classified as a potentially hazardous object, 2005 YU55 poses  no threat of an Earth collision over at least the next 100 years.  However, this will be the closest approach to date by an object this  large that we know about in advance and an event of this type will not  happen again until 2028 when asteroid (153814) 2001 WN5 will pass to  within 0.6 lunar distances.”
While  neither the European Space Agency (ESA) nor NASA has suggested that  YU55 poses a threat to Earth, plans to develop a mission to counteract a  potential asteroid collision in the future are already underway.
  The Daily Mail reported on Tuesday that the ESA is planning to fire an  ‘impactor’ satellite into a ‘test’ asteroid in 2015 to see if the  object’s trajectory can be altered.  The Agency is conducting the test  mission in light of the minimal threat posed by the 700-1100-foot-wide  99942 Apophis asteroid, which has a one in 250,000 chance of impacting  Earth in 2036.
Other Recent Asteroid Encounters
In late June 2011, earth experienced one of its closest encounters with  an asteroid in recent years. But as NASA indicated in the days ahead of  the ‘cosmic close call’, the encounter was so close that Earth’s gravity  sharply altered the asteroid’s trajectory and prevented the space rock  from impacting the planet.
 2011MD, a newly discovered asteroid passed within 12,000 kilometres  (7,500 miles) of Earth. The asteroid was only sighted for the first time  on 22 June by a robotic telescope in New Mexico, USA. The International  Astronomical Union’s Minor Planet Center in Massachusetts, USA, put out  an alert Thursday.
 It was daylight in the UK and Ireland (12.30 GMT) when the asteroid  passed over the southern Atlantic Ocean, near the coast of Antarctica.  The event was observable from South Africa and parts of Antarctica. It  also was visible in the hours leading up to the closest approach across  Australia, New Zealand, southern and eastern Asia, and the western  Pacific.
 Some media outlets proclaimed the asteroid to be as big as New York’s  Empire State Building’. In fact, 2011 MD measured about 16 feet to 35  feet.
 According to Minor Planet Center’s ranking charts 2011 MD’s trip was the  fifth-closest recorded Asteroid event. The last asteroid to impact  earth was ‘2008 TC3’ which was detected on 7 October 2008, just 19 hours  before it burned up in the atmosphere over northern Sudan.
 On 2 June, a 10-metre wide asteroid passed between the earth and moon.
 Asteroid 2009 BD, which was first observed on 16 January 2009 passed  approximately within 0.9 lunar distances (the distance between Earth and  the Moon) of earth. Astronomers believe the rock is a rare “co-orbital  asteroid” which follows the orbit of the Earth, not receding more than  0.1 AU (15 million km) away.
 Two asteroids, several meters in diameter and in unrelated orbits,  passed within the moon’s distance of Earth on September 8 2010. In April  2010 an asteroid roughly as long as a tennis court zoomed past Earth at  about the distance of the moon. The space rock to pass at or within  lunar distance previous to this was 2009 JL2, an asteroid about 17 to 37  metres across, in May 2009.
 There is a roughly 50 percent chance of a 30-metre-wide plus asteroid  striking Earth each century, according to Clark Chapman, a space  scientist at the Southwest Research Institute in Boulder, Colorado, USA.
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