2011 ES4

2011 ES4 (also written 2011 ES4) is an Apollo near-Earth asteroid roughly 22–49 meters (72–160 feet) in diameter. It was first observed on 2 March 2011 when the asteroid was about 0.054 AU (8,100,000 km; 5,000,000 mi) from Earth and had a solar elongation of 159 degrees. It passed closest approach to Earth on 13 March 2011. Before the 2020 approach, the asteroid had a short observation arc of 4 days and had not been observed since March 2011. The asteroid was expected to pass within 1 lunar distance of Earth in early September 2020, but did not. There was no risk of a 2020 impact because the line of variation (LOV) did not pass through where Earth would be, and the closest possible 2020 Earth approach was about 0.00047 AU (70,000 km; 44,000 mi). One line of variation showed the asteroid passing closest to Earth on 5 September 2020 at 0.06 AU (9,000,000 km; 5,600,000 mi) with a magnitude of 23, which would place it near the limiting magnitude of even the best automated astronomical surveys.

2011 ES4
Discovery
Discovered byMLS
Discovery siteMount Lemmon Obs.
Discovery date2 March 2011
(first observation only)
Designations
MPC designation
2011 ES4
Alternative designations
P1154IU (NEOCP 2020)
Minor planet category
Orbital characteristics
Epoch 31 May 2020 (JD 2459000.5)
Uncertainty parameter 1
Observation arc9.54 yr (3,485 days)
Aphelion1.3548 AU
Perihelion0.8260 AU
Semi-major axis
1.0904 AU
Eccentricity0.24248
Orbital period (sidereal)
1.14 yr (415.9 days)
Mean anomaly
337.252°
Inclination3.3735°
Longitude of ascending node
339.890°
273.568°
Earth MOID0.000630 AU (94,200 km)
Jupiter MOID3.681 AU
Physical characteristics
Mean diameter
  • 22–49 m (CNEOS)
  • ~25 m (82 ft)
25.4

    2011 ES4 was recovered as P1154IU on 5 September 2020 at apparent magnitude 18. It passed 0.009886 AU (3.847 LD; 1,478,900 km; 919,000 mi) from Earth on 2 September 2020. With the observation arc being extended to 9 years, it was removed from the Sentry Risk Table on 6 September 2020.

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