2011 XC2

{{Short description|Near-Earth asteroid}}

{{Use dmy dates|date=February 2018}}

{{DISPLAYTITLE:2011 XC2}}

{{Infobox planet

| minorplanet = yes

| background = #FFC2E0

| name = {{mp|2011 XC|2}}

| discovery_ref =

| discoverer = LINEAR (704)

| discovered = 8 December 2011

| mpc_name = {{mp|2011 XC|2}}

| mp_category = {{mpcat|Apollo}}
NEO

| orbit_ref =

| epoch = 13 January 2016 (JD 2457400.5)

| observation_arc = 22 days

| aphelion = {{Convert|3.1579|AU|Gm|abbr=on|lk=on}} (Q)

| perihelion = {{Convert|0.83844|AU|Gm|abbr=on}} (q)

| semimajor = {{Convert|1.9982|AU|Gm|abbr=on}} (a)

| eccentricity = 0.58040 (e)

| period = 2.82 yr (1031.7 d)

| inclination = 28.768° (i)

| asc_node = 70.686° (Ω)

| mean_anomaly = 176.76° (M)

| arg_peri = 306.58° (ω)

| dimensions = ~{{convert|85|m|sp=us}}
60–140 meters

| mass = 8.4{{e|8}} kg (assumed)

| magnitude =

| abs_magnitude = 23.2

| mean_motion = {{Deg2DMS|0.34894|sup=ms}} /day (n)

| uncertainty = 7

| moid = {{Convert|0.00132534|AU|km|abbr=on}}

| jupiter_moid = {{Convert|2.67756|AU|Gm|abbr=on}}

}}

{{mp|2011 XC|2}} (also written 2011 XC2) is a near-Earth asteroid roughly {{convert|60|-|140|m|sp=us}} in diameter that passed less than 1 lunar distance from Earth on 3 December 2011.

From mid October 2011 until 3 December 2011 15:00 UT the small dim asteroid had an elongation less than 60 degrees from the Sun. (While less than 18 degrees from the Sun any dim asteroid can be lost in astronomical twilight, and many observatories can not see below ~40 degrees from the horizon.) On 3 December 2011 at 15:20 UT the asteroid passed {{convert|0.0023|AU|km mi|abbr=on|lk=on}} from Earth and at 16:20 UT passed {{convert|0.0016|AU|km mi|abbr=on|lk=off}} from the Moon. The asteroid was then discovered on 8 December 2011 by Lincoln Near-Earth Asteroid Research (LINEAR) at an apparent magnitude of 19 using a {{convert|1.0|m|in|adj=on|sp=us}} reflecting telescope. At the time of discovery the asteroid was near opposition to the Sun.

It has an observation arc of 22 days with an uncertainty parameter of 7. Virtual clones of the asteroid that fit the uncertainty region in the known trajectory show a 1 in 455,000 chance that the asteroid will impact Earth on 2 December 2056. With a 2056 Palermo Technical Scale of −4.35, the odds of impact by {{mp|2011 XC|2}} in 2056 are about 22387 times less than the background hazard level of Earth impacts which is defined as the average risk posed by objects of the same size or larger over the years until the date of the potential impact. Using the nominal orbit, JPL Horizons shows that the asteroid will be {{convert|3.8|AU|km mi|abbr=on|lk=off}} from Earth on 2 December 2056.

class="wikitable collapsible collapsed sortable"

|+H < 24 asteroids passing less than 1 LD from Earth

!Asteroid

!Date

!Nominal approach distance (LD)

!Min. distance (LD)

!Max. distance (LD)

!Absolute magnitude (H)

!Size (meters)

bgcolor=#c2c2c2

|{{mpl|(152680) 1998 KJ|9}}

1914-12-310.6060.6040.60819.4279–900
bgcolor=#c2c2c2

|{{mpl|(458732) 2011 MD|5}}

1918-09-170.9110.9090.91317.9556–1795
bgcolor=#c2c2c2

|{{mpl|(163132) 2002 CU|11}}

1925-08-300.9030.9010.90518.5443–477
bgcolor=#c2c2c2

|{{mpl|2010 VB|1}}

1936-01-060.5530.5530.55323.248–156
bgcolor=#c2c2c2

|{{mpl|2002 JE|9}}

1971-04-110.6160.5870.65121.2122–393
bgcolor=#c2c2c2

|{{mpl|2013 UG|1}}

1976-10-170.8540.8530.85522.373–237
bgcolor=#c2c2c2

|{{mpl|2012 TY|52}}

1981-11-040.8180.8130.82321.4111–358
bgcolor=#c2c2c2

|{{mpl|2012 UE|34}}

1991-04-080.8470.6761.02723.346–149
bgcolor=#c2c2c2

|{{mpl|2017 VW|13}}

2001-11-080.4540.3183.43620.7153–494
2002 MN2002-06-140.3120.3120.31223.640–130
{{mpl|(308635) 2005 YU|55}}2011-11-080.8450.8450.84521.9320–400
{{mp|2011 XC|2}}2011-12-030.9040.9010.90723.248–156
2018 AH2018-01-020.7730.7720.77322.567–216
{{mpl|2018 GE|3}}2018-04-150.5020.5010.50323.735–135
bgcolor=#e2e2e2

|{{mpl|(153814) 2001 WN|5}}

2028-06-260.6470.6470.64718.2921–943
bgcolor=#e2e2e2

|99942 Apophis

2029-04-130.09810.09630.100019.7310–340
bgcolor=#e2e2e2

|{{mp|2012 UE|34}}

2041-04-080.2830.2740.35423.346–149
bgcolor=#e2e2e2

|{{mpl|2015 XJ|351}}

2047-06-060.7890.25138.13522.470–226
bgcolor=#e2e2e2

|{{mpl|2007 TV|18}}

2058-09-220.9180.9170.91923.837–119
bgcolor=#e2e2e2

|{{mpl|2005 WY|55}}

2065-05-280.8650.8560.87420.7153–494
bgcolor=#e2e2e2

|{{mp|(308635) 2005 YU|55}}

2075-11-080.5920.4990.75221.9320–400
bgcolor=#e2e2e2

|{{mpl|(456938) 2007 YV|56}}

2101-01-020.6210.6150.62821.0133–431
bgcolor=#e2e2e2

|{{mpl|2007 UW|1}}

2129-10-190.2390.1550.38122.761–197
bgcolor=#e2e2e2

|101955 Bennu

2135-09-250.7800.3081.40620.19472–512
bgcolor=#e2e2e2

|{{mpl|(153201) 2000 WO|107}}

2140-12-010.6340.6310.63719.3427–593
bgcolor=#e2e2e2

|{{mpl|2009 DO|111}}

2146-03-230.8960.7441.28822.858–188
bgcolor=#e2e2e2

|{{mpl|(85640) 1998 OX|4}}

2148-01-220.7710.7700.77121.1127–411
bgcolor=#e2e2e2

|{{mpl|2007 UY|1}}

2156-02-130.6850.6526.85622.956–179
bgcolor=#e2e2e2

|{{mpl|2011 LT|17}}

2156-12-160.9980.9551.21521.6101–327

References

{{Reflist

| refs =

{{cite web

|type=last observation: 2011-12-30; arc: 22 days

|title=JPL Small-Body Database Browser: (2011 XC2)

|url=http://ssd.jpl.nasa.gov/sbdb.cgi?sstr=2011XC2

|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190528050534/https://ssd.jpl.nasa.gov/sbdb.cgi?sstr=2011XC2

|url-status=dead

|archive-date=28 May 2019

|publisher=Jet Propulsion Laboratory

|accessdate=1 April 2016}}

{{cite web

|title=MPEC 2011-X35 : 2011 XC2

|publisher=IAU Minor Planet Center

|date=2011-12-11

|url=http://www.minorplanetcenter.net/mpec/K11/K11X35.html

|accessdate=2014-02-20}} (K11X02C)

{{cite web

|type=last observation: 2011-12-30; arc: 22 days

|title=JPL Close-Approach Data: (2011 XC2)

|url=http://ssd.jpl.nasa.gov/sbdb.cgi?sstr=2011XC2;cad=1#cad

|accessdate=2014-02-20}}

{{cite web

|title=Earth Impact Risk Summary: 2011 XC2

|publisher=NASA/JPL Near-Earth Object Program Office

|url=https://cneos.jpl.nasa.gov/sentry/details.html#?des=2011%20XC2

|accessdate=2014-02-20}}

Math: 104.35 = 22387

{{cite web

|date=31 Aug 2005

|title=The Palermo Technical Impact Hazard Scale

|publisher=NASA/JPL Near-Earth Object Program Office

|url=http://neo.jpl.nasa.gov/risk/doc/palermo.html

|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20020321092747/http://neo.jpl.nasa.gov/risk/doc/palermo.html

|url-status=dead

|archive-date=21 March 2002

|accessdate=2014-02-20}}

{{cite web

|title=Absolute Magnitude (H)

|publisher=NASA/JPL

|url=http://neo.jpl.nasa.gov/glossary/h.html

|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20010302182040/http://neo.jpl.nasa.gov/glossary/h.html

|url-status=dead

|archive-date=2001-03-02

|accessdate=2014-02-20}}

{{cite web

|title=2011XC2 Ephemerides for 11 October 2011 through 17 December 2011

|publisher=NEODyS (Near Earth Objects – Dynamic Site)

|url=http://newton.spacedys.com/neodys/index.php?pc=1.1.3.1&n=2011XC2&oc=500&y0=2011&m0=10&d0=11&h0=0&mi0=0&y1=2011&m1=12&d1=17&h1=0&mi1=0&ti=1.0&tiu=days

|accessdate=2014-02-20}}

{{cite web

|author=Horizons output

|url=http://ssd.jpl.nasa.gov/horizons.cgi?find_body=1&body_group=sb&sstr=2011XC2

|title=Horizon Online Ephemeris System

|accessdate=2014-02-20}} (Geocentric Solution)

}}