2010 FQ is a very small asteroid whose orbit crosses the orbit of Earth. NASA JPL has classified 2010 FQ as a "Potentially Hazardous Asteroid" due to its predicted close pass(es) with Earth.
2010 FQ orbits the sun every 689 days (1.89 years), coming as close as 0.98 AU and reaching as far as 2.07 AU from the sun. 2010 FQ is about 0.3 kilometers in diameter, making it a small to average asteroid, comparable in size to a football field.
2010 FQ's orbit is 0.00 AU from Earth's orbit at its closest point. This means that its orbit is relatively close to Earth's orbit.
2010 FQ has 7 close approaches predicted in the coming decades:
Date | Distance from Earth (km) | Velocity (km/s) |
---|---|---|
Feb. 22, 2027 | 8,793,731 | 8.031 |
March 5, 2044 | 17,841,180 | 9.116 |
Jan. 24, 2097 | 11,808,574 | 8.510 |
Jan. 25, 2114 | 12,165,029 | 8.562 |
March 9, 2163 | 19,458,710 | 9.279 |
Feb. 22, 2180 | 7,982,081 | 7.899 |
March 9, 2197 | 19,526,933 | 9.257 |
2010 FQ's orbit is determined by observations dating back to Jan. 16, 2010. It was last officially observed on Oct. 1, 2022. The IAU Minor Planet Center records 272 observations used to determine its orbit.
The position of 2010 FQ is indicated by a ◯ pink circle. Note that the object may not be in your current field of view. Use the controls below to adjust position, location, and time.
The below comparison is an artistic rendering that uses available data on the diameter of 2010 FQ to create an approximate landscape rendering with New York City in the background. This approximation is built for full-resolution desktop browsers. Shape, color, and texture of asteroid are imagined.