HomeScienceA 9.8-foot asteroid, 2025 TF, zoomed past Earth closer than satellites over Antarctica

A 9.8-foot asteroid, 2025 TF, zoomed past Earth closer than satellites over Antarctica

The space rock, now named 2025 TF, was spotted after the event using observations from the Catalina Sky Survey, a NASA-funded project that monitors near-Earth objects.

October 08, 2025 / 15:31 IST
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Tiny Asteroid Slips Past Earth Closer Than Satellites Without Detection (Representative Image: Canva
Tiny Asteroid Slips Past Earth Closer Than Satellites Without Detection (Representative Image: Canva

A giraffe-sized asteroid zipped past Earth on 30 September, flying over Antarctica at just 265 miles (428 kilometres) above the surface. According to new data from the European Space Agency (ESA), the unexpected flyby occurred at 8:47 p.m. EDT (0047 GMT on 1 October), and astronomers noticed it only hours later.

The space rock, now named 2025 TF, was spotted after the event using observations from the Catalina Sky Survey, a NASA-funded project that monitors near-Earth objects. Measuring between 1 and 3 metres wide, it was too small to cause serious damage but could have burned brightly if it entered the atmosphere.

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Why did scientists miss this asteroid?

Asteroid 2025 TF escaped detection likely due to its small size and faint visibility. Objects under 140 metres are not classified as potentially hazardous, as they pose minimal threat to Earth. To fall into that category, a space rock must be at least 460 feet (140 metres) wide and pass within 4.65 million miles (7.48 million kilometres) of the planet.