I found via SlashDot this article on a naked-eye visible fly-by of asteroid 2004 MN4 on 13 Apr 2029 (yes, it's a Friday!

http://www.space.com/spacewatch/050204_2004_mn4.html
For the young 'uns, something to look forward to?
Spiff.
Anonymous wrote:They just updated it in the last 48 hours. It was estimated to miss by 58,000 km. Now it's down to 30,000 km. Let's hope they don't do that again!
Bob Hegwood wrote:Interesting...
Any information on how close it will come to the Moon?
Looks like that will be a close call too.
Take care, Bob
dirkpitt wrote:If a satellite could take pictures of the asteroid as it zips by, that would be cool.
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Object 2004
a (AU) 0.92
e 0.191
i (deg) 3.3
w (deg) 126.2
Node (deg) 204.6
M (deg) 274.7
q (AU) 0.746
Q (AU) 1.10
P (yr) 0.89
H (mag) 19.23
MOID (AU) 0.000708
ref 63
class ATE*
andersa wrote:In order to provide pictures better than those that can be obtained from the ground, that satellite [snip]
Evil Dr Ganymede wrote:So I wonder when the apocalypse cultists will be starting their hijinx...
selden wrote:The NEODyS site has more accurate values. See
http://newton.dm.unipi.it/cgi-bin/neodys/neoibo?objects:2004MN4;main
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"2004 MN4" "Sol"
{
EllipticalOrbit
{
Epoch 2451544.500 # 2000 Jan 01 00:00UT
Period 0.88542969954186335186066338099042 # 1 year = 365.2622.
SemiMajorAxis 0.92209
Eccentricity 0.191253
Inclination 3.333
AscendingNode 204.563
LongOfPericenter 126.223
MeanLongitude 274.4
}
Radius 0.160
Albedo 0.15
}
Are those satellites fixed in the equatorial plane? If so, then I doubt they will catch 2004 MN4, which will cross the equatorial plane outside the geostationary orbit and then reach 30 degrees of declination (geocentric view). As it will still remain closer to the satellites than to the Earth, the geostationaries will have to bend over backwards to see it, way outside that 17-degree field. Picking satellite 96030B (from Thomas Guilpain's Motherlode submission) for a test, it shows 2004 MN4 at 50 degrees of declination, in Cygnus and Lacerta (using a sampled trajectory for 2029 obtained from JPL Horizons).Spaceman Spiff wrote:What I'd want to do with Celestia is see if the asteroid will pass within the field of view of any of the meteorological satellites. The satellites there then will be different, but the geosync. longitudes are reserved per purpose. Piccies have a 17?° wide field to accommodate Earth.
Spaceman Spiff wrote:But yes, we should sent a spacecraft to intercept and land, a radio beacon would help track future risks much better. Solar System Wide GPS Now!.
Spaceman Spiff wrote:but both Earth and 2004 MN4 are far separated from the orbit intersect point come 13 Apr 2029. That is, not only is 200 MN4 in the wrong place in the orbit, but the orbit itself isn't in the right place. I'm sure specification of orbital elements is fairly standard. I'm scratchin' my head here.
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"2004 MN4 (pre-2029)" "Sol"
{
Class "asteroid"
Texture "asteroid.jpg"
Mesh "asteroid.cms"
Radius 0.240
Ending "2030 01 01 00:00"
EllipticalOrbit {
Period 0.885618060
SemiMajorAxis 0.922187699
Eccentricity 0.191481713
Inclination 3.345885889
AscendingNode 203.840602823
ArgOfPericenter 126.721441081
MeanAnomaly 238.040230403
Epoch 2462227.5
}
}
"2004 MN4 (y2029)" "Sol"
{
Class "asteroid"
Texture "asteroid.jpg"
Mesh "asteroid.cms"
Radius 0.240
Beginning "2029 01 01 00:00"
SampledOrbit "2004mn4.xyz"
Ending "2030 01 01 00:00"
}
"2004 MN4 (post-2029)" "Sol"
{
Class "asteroid"
Texture "asteroid.jpg"
Mesh "asteroid.cms"
Radius 0.240
Beginning "2029 01 01 00:00"
EllipticalOrbit {
Period 1.169087500
SemiMajorAxis 1.109736033
Eccentricity 0.191679714
Inclination 2.161757800
AscendingNode 203.598345230
ArgOfPericenter 70.043551397
MeanAnomaly 314.849145408
Epoch 2462246.5
}
}
andersa wrote:Are those satellites fixed in the equatorial plane?
andersa wrote:If so, then I doubt they will catch 2004 MN4, which will cross the equatorial plane outside the geostationary orbit [sni-i-p]
andersa wrote:Do we know the specifications for sufficiently durable radio transmitters today? I guess they should be solar-driven, [snip]
andersa wrote:Note to self:Enable radio command channel before ejecting unit for non-return mission.
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"2004 MN4 13Apr29" "Sol"
{
Mesh "asteroid.cms"
Texture "asteroid.*"
EllipticalOrbit
{
Epoch 2462239.750000000 # = A.D. 2029-Apr-13 06:00:00.0000 (CT)
Period 0.884
SemiMajorAxis 9.213165631331153E-01
Eccentricity 1.971975371275526E-01
Inclination 3.451227590422083E+00
AscendingNode 2.037799255760677E+02
ArgOfPericenter 1.265176974665853E+02
MeanAnomaly 2.526098901409764E+02
}
Radius 0.160
Albedo 0.15
}