An asteroid discovery algorithm developed for the Vera C. Rubin Observatory’s upcoming Legacy Survey of Space and Time has identified its first “potentially hazardous” asteroid, PHA. PHAs are objects with a potential to make threatening close approaches to the Earth. The roughly 600-foot-long asteroid, designated 2022 SF289, was discovered during a test drive of the algorithm with the ATLAS survey in Hawaii. Finding 2022 SF289, which poses no risk to Earth for the foreseeable future, confirms that the next-generation algorithm, known as HelioLinc3D, can identify near-Earth asteroids with fewer and more dispersed observations than required by today’s methods. Ari Heinze (DiRAC/Rubin Observatory), Siegfried Eggl (UIUC/Rubin Observatory), Joachim Moeyens (DiRAC/Rubin Observatory/B612 Asteroid Institute) and Mario Juric (DiRAC/Rubin Observatory). Video by Nikolina Horvat (DiRAC) and Joachim Moeyens. Identification made using HelioLinc3D (). ZTF observations recovered using ADAM::Precovery (). Visualizations using the OpenSpace Project () DiRAC Institute: Rubin Observatory: ATLAS Survey: Potentially Hazardous Asteroids:
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