There are more than 37,000 asteroids known to come within 1.3 au of the Sun. Of this near-Earth asteroid population, roughly 2,500 are classified as potentially hazardous — being more than about 140 meters across and coming within 0.05 au of Earth’s orbit (about 20 times the distance between Earth and the Moon). In the image above, Luisa Fernanda Zambrano-Marin (University of Granada and University of Central Florida) and collaborators present observations of 2020 BX12, a potentially hazardous binary asteroid. The larger of the two asteroids in the system was discovered in January 2020 by the Asteroid Terrestrial-impact Last Alert System. About a week after the initial discovery, the 1,000-foot-wide Arecibo Telescope aimed its powerful planetary radar at 2020 BX12 and revealed the asteroid’s small companion. 2020 BX12 was the last of nearly 60 binary or triple near-Earth asteroids discovered with Arecibo before the telescope collapsed in December 2020. As Zambrano-Marin‘s team notes, the loss of Arecibo hampers scientists’ ability to find companions to near-Earth asteroids, which can be critical for determining the properties of these asteroids and guiding our planetary defense strategies. To learn more about this discovery, as well as what the team learned from follow-up spectroscopy, be sure to check out the full research article linked below.
Citation
“2020 BX12—The Last Binary Asteroid Discovered at Arecibo,” Luisa Fernanda Zambrano-Marin et al 2025 Planet. Sci. J. 6 91. doi:10.3847/PSJ/adbe39