NEW YORK — An asteroid half the size of a football field will make a close approach to Earth, but poses no threat of smacking into the planet, NASA officials said Feb. 7.

The asteroid 2012 DA14 will approach within 28,000 kilometers of Earth when it zips by during its close encounter Feb. 15. That is the closest shave ever for an asteroid the size of 2012 DA14 that astronomers have known about in advance, NASA scientists said.

The 45-meter-wide asteroid will not only pass between Earth and the Moon’s orbit, but also fly lower than geosynchronous communications and weather satellites circling the planet. Asteroid 2012 DA14 will be 8,000 kilometers closer to Earth than those satellites during the flyby.

“This asteroid seems to be passing in the sweet spot between the GPS satellites and weather and communications satellites,” Don Yeomans, the head of NASA’s asteroid-tracking program, told reporters in a teleconference. “It’s extremely unlikely that any of these will be impacted.” 

Experts at the European Space Agency (ESA) agreed. “This is well inside the geostationary ring, where many communication satellites are located,” Detlef Koschny, responsible for near-Earth objects at ESA’s Space Situational Awareness office, said in a statement. “There is no danger to these satellites, however, as the asteroid will come ‘from below’ and not intersect the geostationary belt.”

Geosynchronous satellites typically orbit about 36,000 kilometers above the Earth’s equator.

Record-setting space rock flyby

Asteroid 2012 DA14’s close encounter is also a record-breaking celestial event, Yeomans said. An object this large only passes this close to the Earth about once every 40 years, and likely only hits the planet once every 1,200 years, he added.

Amateur astronomers have already captured some photos of asteroid 2012 DA14, and NASA plans to make detailed radar observations of the space rock to learn about its composition, spin and surface features, the scientists said.

The asteroid is similar in size to the object that exploded over Siberia, Russia, in 1908 in the Tunguska event. That explosion leveled hundreds of square kilometers of land, scientists said. While asteroid 2012 DA14 could potential create such destruction if it struck the Earth, there is absolutely no chance of an impact for the foreseeable future, NASA officials said.

“This asteroid’s orbit is so well known that we can say with confidence that even considering its orbital uncertainties, it can pass no closer than 17,100 miles (27,519 kilometers) from the Earth’s surface,” Yeomans said. “No Earth impact is possible.”

NASA scientists used advanced modeling techniques to map out the path of the asteroid with exact precision, and ground-based telescopes tracked 2012 DA14 since the asteroid’s discovery last year by amateur astronomers. Researchers plan to keep tabs on the asteroid after it makes its closest approach to Earth somewhere over Indonesia at 2:24 p.m. EST, Yeomans said.

Asteroid under radar

Asteroid 2012 DA14 also marks the first time scientists have had the chance to observe the close flyby of a near-Earth object of this size. That makes the asteroid a unique opportunity for scientists to study the space rocks floating around the solar system, but that doesn’t mean observations will be easy, NASA scientist Lindley Johnson said. 

Some ground-based telescopes will be turned toward the asteroid as it shoots by, but the instruments won’t catch sight of the asteroid until after it comes inside the orbits of geosynchronous satellites, Johnson said.

Those post-flyby observations are still useful, however. Scientists are hoping to get a sense of what 2012 DA14 is composed of as well as any helpful clues about its structure and how it compares to the structure of other space rocks.

“You can only collect this data when the asteroids are significantly close to the Earth,” Amy Mainzer, a researcher at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif. said.

NASA astronomers and scientists around the world, meanwhile, regularly monitor the night sky for signs of previously unknown asteroids that may pose a potential impact threat to Earth. Yeomans runs NASA’s Near-Earth Object Program Office at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif., to keep track of potentially dangerous asteroids.

Although 2012 DA14 will be too dark to see with the naked eye as if flies by Earth, amateur astronomers with backyard telescopes could potentially catch a glimpse of asteroid as it makes its way across the sky, if they know when and where to look.

It will be extremely difficult, however, because of the asteroid’s speed, which will make it appear as a fast-moving pinpoint of light in the night sky, NASA scientists said.

NASA officials also announced that they will be streaming the flyby live the night of Feb. 15. A telescope at NASA’s Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Ala. will broadcast its view of the event from 6 p.m. to 9 p.m. EST.