I got a few positional images of this object with our 1.5-m (60") on Mt. Lemmon 
last night, but Jure Skvarč at the Črni Vrh Observatory in Slovenia obtained 
one of the nicer time lapse animations of the asteroids motion against the 
background stars.


He writes on his Youtube page:

"The images for this animation were taken using a 60-cm telescope from 
the Črni Vrh Observatory on the night of 26 July 2011.  Each exposure 
was of 15 seconds.  The telescope was tracking on the asteroid, changing the 
rate of tracking between exposures.  The entire sequence lasted 
about 4h40m, during which 635 exposures were made.  At the time the 
asteroid was less than 200000 km from Earth.  At the closest approach 
some 15 hours later the distance was about 20000 km."

4 hours, 40 minutes of imaging the NEO until his dawn, compressed down to 43 
seconds. Enjoy


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=p-pv18xDWCY 
 

--
Richard Kowalski
Full Moon Photography
IMCA #1081
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