Asteroid 1998 QE2 and its moon sailed within 5.8 million kilometres of Earth on May 31, making their closest approach to our planet for at least the next 200 years.
Researchers say new radar images captured by the Arecibo Observatory in Puerto Rico are revealing just how unique this binary asteroid is, SPACE.Com reported.
"Asteroid QE2 is dark, red, and primitive - that is, it hasn't been heated or melted as much as other asteroids," Arecibo's Ellen Howell said in a statement.
The 305 meters Arecibo dish and NASA's 70 metre Deep Space Network antenna in Goldstone, California, tracked 1998 QE2 as it approached Earth, then kept following the near-Earth asteroid as it receded into the depths of space.
The resulting images helped researchers take 1998 QE2's measure. The dark, cratered main asteroid is 3 km wide, and it has a 750 metre moon that orbits it once every 32 hours.
Researchers said studying the moon of the asteroid and its orbit should help scientists determine the mass of the main asteroid, which in turn will shed light on the composition of the rock.
Scientists said although there was no danger of 1998 QE2 hitting Earth during last month's flyby, however, if it had hit us, the damage would have been severe.
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