http://www.macon.com/mld/macon/news/nation/4880200.htm

Small asteroid shares orbit with Earth
PAUL RECER
Associated Press
January 5, 2003

SEATTLE - In a space game of "catch me if you can," a small asteroid shares the
same orbit with Earth - sometimes ahead, sometimes behind, but never quite
touching - as the two race around the sun, astronomers say.

"This is one of the most interesting orbits for an asteroid we have ever seen," said
Paul Chodas, a Jet Propulsion Laboratory researcher who studies asteroids and
who first plotted the bizarre motion of the space rock.

The asteroid, called 2002 AA29, is in a precise circular orbit that follows the same
general path as the Earth around the sun. But, like a mouse teasing a cat, the
asteroid sometimes speeds up and precedes the Earth and then later slows to drop
into a follow-the-leader approach.

But never will the two meet, Chodas says.

On Wednesday, the asteroid makes its closest approach to the Earth in almost a
century, moving within 3.7 million miles.

"For a number of decades the asteroid has been going a little slower than the Earth
and the Earth has been catching up," Chodas said in a telephone interview. "This
week it makes its closest approach in 95 years."

Chodas said that during the close approach, the Earth's gravity will cause the
asteroid to swing into a slightly lower orbit, which will make it move faster than the
Earth.

The asteroid will continue moving ahead until, in 95 years, it approaches the Earth
from behind. Gravity then will force the asteroid into a higher, slower orbit and the
Earth will move ahead. In another 95 years, the Earth approaches from behind and
the cycle is repeated.

"There's no possibility that this asteroid could hit Earth because Earth's gravity
rebuffs its periodic advances and keeps it at bay," said Don Yeomans, head of a
NASA asteroid program at JPL, in a statement. "The asteroid and Earth take turns
sneaking up on each other, but they never get too close."

A computer simulation suggests that in about 600 years, the pattern will change
slightly.

Chodas said the asteroid will loop about the Earth, but never will become a true
satellite that actually orbits the planet. After about 40 years, it will drop back into
its earlier pattern and the cat-and-mouse game will continue for many more
centuries.

The asteroid is only about 200 feet across, too small to be easily seen. It was
discovered last year by an Air Force telescope that is part of a NASA program to
find and plot asteroids that orbit near the Earth.

Even if 2002 AA29 did hit the Earth it would not cause planetwide destruction as
did the 6-mile-wide asteroid that hit and killed the dinosaurs some 23 million
years ago.

Instead, said Chodas, the small asteroid would gouge out a crater about
three-quarters of a mile across, similar to the Barringer meteor crater in Arizona.

Asteroid observations are among the 1,000 studies to be presented this week at
the national meeting of the American Astronomical Society.

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