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TUSCALOOSA, Ala. – The asteroid Toutatis will make a close approach to the Earth
this month. University of Alabama astronomers will be on the rooftop of Gallalee Hall
at 7:30 p.m. on Sept. 24 to see if they can monitor its path, and the public is invited
to join them.
Some Web sites are reporting the 3-mile-long asteroid will hit the Earth, but Dr.
Bill Keel, professor of astronomy at UA, said that is not the case.
“This asteroid orbits the sun once every four years and will pass 1 million miles
from the Earth,” Keel said. “While it is close enough that if you’re paying attention
you can see it move, which can make your hair rise, we know the orbit it will take
quite well.”
Backyard viewers will not be able to see the asteroid without binoculars or telescopes. “Its
orbit will take it by the South Pole – a part of the sky that never rises in the Tuscaloosa
area – so we’re tying to catch it a few nights before it travels below our southern
horizon,” he said.
Keel said that chance is enough to get him out with a telescope. The asteroid Toutatis
is shaped like a dumbbell, and its regular 4-year trek around the sun takes it from
just inside the Earth’s path to between Mars and Jupiter. Asteroid Toutatis is officially
numbered 4179 and was discovered by French astronomers in 1989.
Gallalee Hall is located on the UA campus near the intersection of Hackberry Lane
and University Boulevard in Tuscaloosa. This is the second public viewing of the fall
semester. Contact UA’s department of physics
and astronomy at 205/348-5050 to check on sky conditions and for more information.
Cloudy conditions are not conducive to star gazing.
The College of Arts and Sciences is the University’s
largest division and the largest public liberal arts college in the state with 6,600
students and 360 faculty. Students from the College have won numerous national awards
including Rhodes Scholarships, Goldwater Scholarships and memberships on the USA Today
Academic All American Team.
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