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  2. Asteroids
  3. 2018 BU1
Low Threat

2018 BU1

NEO Reference ID: 3797752

View on NASA JPL

Threat Assessment: Low

No significant threat

Physical Characteristics

Diameter (min)

32.0 m

0.032 km

Diameter (max)

71.5 m

0.071 km

Absolute Magnitude

24.60

H (mag)

Sentry Object

No

Not being monitored

Orbital Parameters

Semi-Major Axis

1.5939 AU

Eccentricity

0.462283

Inclination

6.3713 deg

Orbital Period

735.03 days

Perihelion Distance

0.8571 AU

Aphelion Distance

2.3308 AU

Jupiter Tisserand

4.240

MOID

0.007511 AU

Orbit Uncertainty

0

Orbit Class

APO

Near-Earth asteroid orbits which cross the Earth’s orbit similar to that of 1862 Apollo

Range: a (semi-major axis) > 1.0 AU; q (perihelion) < 1.017 AU

Orbit ID

12

Data Arc

745 days

Observations

109

First Observed

2018-01-09

Last Observed

2020-01-24

Close Approach History (39)

DateDistance (km)Distance (AU)Distance (LD)Velocity (km/s)Orbiting Body
2181-Jun-23 11:1070,533,3410.471486183.4124.59Earth
2179-Jun-19 00:3656,547,8860.377999147.0421.79Earth
2177-Jun-13 12:1242,577,2040.284611110.7118.98Earth
2175-Jun-08 06:0329,267,3690.19564076.1016.11Earth
2173-Jun-01 17:4918,508,9990.12372548.1313.40Earth
2171-May-25 14:2614,350,7350.09592937.3210.83Earth
2169-May-11 06:5319,038,8060.12726749.518.77Earth
2167-Apr-18 02:4424,091,6570.16104362.658.77Earth
2165-Mar-25 21:2225,012,8760.16720165.049.24Earth
2163-Mar-03 16:2421,088,7370.14096954.848.93Earth
2161-Feb-10 21:5512,887,2410.08614633.519.20Earth
2159-Jan-30 23:552,991,3660.0199967.7810.91Earth
2157-Jan-26 03:044,518,1260.03020211.7512.17Earth
2155-Jan-20 23:0915,573,5510.10410340.5014.38Earth
2153-Jan-14 23:4528,367,4070.18962473.7616.95Earth
2151-Jan-10 10:1642,681,3730.285307110.9819.75Earth
2149-Jan-05 03:3956,594,3360.378310147.1622.52Earth
2146-Dec-31 20:3170,944,7020.474236184.4825.37Earth
2042-Jun-19 03:0664,423,6530.430646167.5223.31Earth
2040-Jun-13 20:5151,044,3000.341210132.7320.64Earth
2038-Jun-09 09:5638,317,8490.25613999.6418.01Earth
2036-Jun-03 21:1926,933,5330.18004070.0415.49Earth
2034-May-29 10:4117,534,2860.11720945.5912.93Earth
2032-May-21 20:2814,973,0310.10008938.9310.70Earth
2030-May-10 13:0818,864,5960.12610249.058.88Earth
2028-Apr-18 16:5923,695,5270.15839561.628.72Earth
2026-Mar-29 06:3725,070,5970.16758765.199.20Earth
2024-Mar-09 15:5623,046,8730.15405959.939.12Earth
2022-Feb-17 16:1717,150,6750.11464544.608.94Earth
2020-Feb-03 23:418,618,3990.05761022.419.81Earth
2018-Jan-27 05:001,177,6800.0078723.0611.31Earth
2018-Jan-26 23:381,025,3150.0068542.6712.03Moon
2016-Jan-25 01:583,741,2410.0250099.7312.07Earth
2014-Jan-19 07:2813,723,8380.09173835.6914.03Earth
2012-Jan-15 01:4224,813,3350.16586764.5216.22Earth
2010-Jan-09 12:5137,651,5680.25168597.9118.78Earth
2008-Jan-05 18:5150,154,5870.335263130.4221.23Earth
2005-Dec-31 23:3962,791,3270.419734163.2823.74Earth
1990-Apr-13 09:298,255,5270.05518521.4715.05Mars

Frequently Asked Questions

How is asteroid size estimated?
Asteroid sizes are estimated primarily from their absolute magnitude (H), which measures intrinsic brightness. Since brightness depends on both size and surface reflectivity (albedo), scientists use assumed albedo values to convert H into a diameter range. A typical near-Earth asteroid has an albedo of 0.05 to 0.25. Radar observations from facilities like Goldstone can provide more precise size measurements by bouncing radio waves off the asteroid and analyzing the returned signal. Spacecraft flybys and occultation events (when an asteroid passes in front of a star) provide the most accurate measurements but are rare.
What do the orbital parameters mean?
Orbital parameters describe the shape, size, and orientation of an asteroid's path around the Sun. The semi-major axis is half the longest diameter of the elliptical orbit, measured in astronomical units (AU). Eccentricity describes how elongated the orbit is (0 = perfect circle, closer to 1 = highly elliptical). Inclination is the angle between the asteroid's orbital plane and Earth's orbital plane. Perihelion is the closest point to the Sun, aphelion is the farthest. The orbital period is how long one complete orbit takes. The Jupiter Tisserand invariant helps classify the object's dynamical relationship with Jupiter.
What does "potentially hazardous" actually mean?
An asteroid is classified as "potentially hazardous" (PHA) by NASA when it meets two specific criteria: its estimated diameter is 140 meters or larger (absolute magnitude H of 22.0 or less), and its minimum orbit intersection distance (MOID) with Earth is 0.05 AU (about 7.5 million kilometers) or less. This classification is based on orbital geometry, not an imminent collision threat. It means the asteroid's orbit could theoretically bring it close enough to Earth to be concerning if its trajectory were to change due to gravitational perturbations. Most PHAs have well-understood orbits with no significant impact probability in the foreseeable future.
How accurate are close approach predictions?
Close approach predictions vary in accuracy depending on the quality and quantity of observations. Well-observed asteroids with long data arcs (many years of tracking) have extremely precise orbit calculations -- their positions can be predicted to within a few kilometers over decades. Newly discovered asteroids with short data arcs may have uncertainties of thousands of kilometers. The "orbit uncertainty" parameter (0-9 scale) indicates this precision, with 0 being the most certain. NASA's Sentry system continuously recalculates impact probabilities as new observations refine each asteroid's orbit.

Related

Asteroid Dashboard

View all near-Earth objects

Today's Close Approaches

Live data, no caching

NASA JPL Database

Official NASA page for this asteroid

Solar System Explorer

Planets, moons & orbits

Space Glossary

NEO, PHA, MOID & more terms

Mars Exploration

Rover photos & mission data

Asteroid Classification

Apollo asteroids are Earth-crossing NEOs with semi-major axes greater than 1.0 AU and perihelion distances less than 1.017 AU. Named after 1862 Apollo, this is the largest group of potentially hazardous asteroids. Many well-known impactors belong to this class.

Key Terms

PHA (Potentially Hazardous Asteroid)

NEA with MOID ≤ 0.05 AU and absolute magnitude H ≤ 22 (diameter ≥ ~140m).

MOID (Minimum Orbit Intersection Distance)

The closest possible distance between two orbits, regardless of where the objects are along their paths.

Absolute Magnitude (H)

A measure of an asteroid's intrinsic brightness. Lower H values mean larger and/or more reflective objects.

Lunar Distance (LD)

Average distance from Earth to the Moon (~384,400 km). Used to express asteroid miss distances in human-relatable terms.

Did You Know?

NASA's DART mission in 2022 was the first-ever test of planetary defense technology. By crashing a spacecraft into the moonlet Dimorphos, NASA changed its orbital period by 33 minutes -- far exceeding the minimum benchmark of 73 seconds -- proving that kinetic deflection is a viable strategy for protecting Earth from hazardous asteroids.