Double Trouble: Earth's Temporary Twin Moon

Arjuna asteroid beltFri Sep 20 2024
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Waking up one morning to find a second moon hovering above the Earth's horizon. Sounds like science fiction, right? Well, it's about to become a reality! For the next two months, from September 29 to November 25, Earth will have a temporary companion moon orbiting our planet. This celestial body, named 2024 PT5, is an asteroid that's roughly 10 meters in length. While it's not big enough to be spotted with the naked eye, scientists are excited to study this mini-moon phenomenon.
The mini-moon event is a rare occurrence where celestial bodies like asteroids and comets get caught in Earth's gravitational pull and orbit around our home planet. If they complete full revolutions of Earth, they're considered mini-moons. The leader researcher, Universidad Complutense de Madrid professor Carlos de la Fuente Marcos, explains that 2024 PT5 belongs to the Arjuna asteroid belt, a secondary asteroid belt filled with space rocks that follow orbits similar to Earth's at an average distance of 93 million miles from the sun. This isn't the first time Earth has had a surprise mini-moon. In 2020, an asteroid called 2020 CD3 became a mini-moon, and in 1981, an asteroid called 2022 NX1 first became an Earth mini-moon before returning in 2022. It's expected to reappear in 2051, while 2024 PT5 will return four years later in 2055.
https://localnews.ai/article/double-trouble-earths-temporary-twin-moon-f791505a

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