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2014 ES57

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2014 ES57
Discovery[1]
Discovered byDES-DECam
Discovery siteCerro Tololo Obs.
Discovery date2 March 2014
Designations
2014 ES57
Orbital characteristics[2]
Epoch 1 July 2021 (JD 2459396.5)
Uncertainty parameter 0
Observation arc12.05 yr (4,402 d)
Earliest precovery date22 September 2009
Aphelion5.73 AU
Perihelion4.80 AU
5.26 AU
Eccentricity0.0882
12.07 yr (4,410 d)
306°
0° 4m 53.76s / day
Inclination6.42°
229°
203°
Earth MOID3.81 AU
Jupiter MOID0.191 AU
TJupiter2.980
Physical characteristics
5.6 km (est.)[a]
14.98[2]
14.99[1]

2014 ES57 is a Greek camp Jupiter trojan[1] roughly 5.6 kilometers (3 miles) in diameter[a] that was briefly listed on the Sentry Risk Table in April 2021 when JPL transitioned to DE441. Once listed on the Sentry Risk Table additional archived observations were quickly located that confirmed 2014 ES57 is a harmless Jupiter trojan that does not get closer to Earth than 3.8 AU (570 million km).[1] Once the new astrometry was verified and published it was removed from the Sentry Risk Table on 4 May 2021.

When 2014 ES57 had a short observation arc of 3 days, some orbit solutions suggested it could be a near-Earth object[4] that was discovered when it was near aphelion 7 AU from the Sun.[5] As a result of the possible near-Earth orbit, the Sentry Risk Table listed a non-significant 1:1-billion chance of impacting Earth on 12 October 2059.[6]

Notes

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  1. ^ a b Given an absolute magnitude (H) of 14.98 and a trojan albedo for a carbonaceous asteroid of 0.057, yields a mean diameter of around 5.6 kilometer or 3 miles.[7]

References

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  1. ^ a b c d e "2014 ES57". Minor Planet Center. Retrieved 18 October 2021.
  2. ^ a b c "JPL Small-Body Database Browser: 2014 ES57" (2021-10-11 last obs.). Jet Propulsion Laboratory. Retrieved 18 October 2021. (Archived 6 May 2021)
  3. ^ "List of Jupiter Trojans". Minor Planet Center. 27 September 2021. Retrieved 18 October 2021.
  4. ^ JPL #5 DE441 (solution date:2021-Apr-15) listed as an Apollo NEO with perihelion of 0.7 AU (Wayback Machine archive)
  5. ^ Find_Orb showing "discovery" near aphelion of 7 AU (Wayback Machine archive)
  6. ^ "Earth Impact Risk Summary: 2014 ES57". NASA/JPL Near-Earth Object Program Office. Retrieved 27 April 2021.
  7. ^ "Asteroid Size Estimator". CNEOS NASA/JPL. Retrieved 18 October 2021.
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