2002 NN4 flew by Earth on 6 June 2020, passing 0.034 AU (5.1 million km; 13 LD) from Earth.[2] The asteroid had been recovered two days earlier on 4 June 2020.[1] By 11 June 2020, the asteroid had brightened to apparent magnitude 14.4, which is roughly the brightness of Pluto.
A spectroscopic survey of the small near-Earth asteroid population conducted by European astronomers determined that 2002 NN4 is an X-type asteroid.[3][6] Because of the objects low albedo (see below), it would be considered a primitive P-type asteroid in the Tholen classification.
Diameter and albedo
According to the survey carried out by the NEOWISE mission of NASA's Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer, 2002 NN4 measures (735±243) meters in diameter, and its surface has a dark albedo of (0.030±0.027).[4] (The NEOWISE publication uses the designation G3348 for this asteroid.[7]) In 2016, astronomers using the European New Technology Telescope at La Silla Observatory found a diameter of 613 meters with an albedo of 0.047.[3]: 4
Rotation period
In August 2016, the first rotational lightcurve of 2002 NN4 was obtained from photometric observations over five nights by Brian Warner at the Center for Solar System Studies (U82) in California. Lightcurve analysis gave a rotation period of 14.50±0.03 hours with a high brightness variation of 0.74±0.05magnitude, indicative of a highly elongated shape (U=3−).[5][a]
Notes
^ abLightcurve plot of (163348) 2002 NN4, by Brian Warner at the Center for Solar System Studies (2016). Rotation period of 14.50±0.03 hours with a brightness amplitude of 0.74±0.05 mag. Quality code is 3−. Summary figures at the LCDB and CS3 websites.