Updated
Updated · The New York Times · Jul 9
China's Tianwen-2 Captures First Image of 60-Foot Quasi-Moon Kamoʻoalewa
Updated
Updated · The New York Times · Jul 9

China's Tianwen-2 Captures First Image of 60-Foot Quasi-Moon Kamoʻoalewa

3 articles · Updated · The New York Times · Jul 9

Summary

  • Tianwen-2 photographed 469219 Kamoʻoalewa for the first time after closing to 12.5 miles from the asteroid, capping a 400-day chase since its May 2025 launch.
  • The image shows a pointy, asymmetric body about 60 feet long, unlike the rounder, rubble-pile asteroids visited by recent robotic missions.
  • Scientists said the craggy shape could point to a violent past, possibly leaving Kamoʻoalewa as debris from a catastrophic collision.
  • Kamoʻoalewa is a quasi-moon that moves in step with Earth while orbiting the sun, making it a useful target for studying how near-Earth asteroids arrive close to the planet.

Insights

What can this tiny, fast-spinning rock teach us about defending Earth from more dangerous asteroid threats?
Is Earth's mysterious quasi-moon a lost lunar fragment or a visitor from the deep-space asteroid belt?
As the asteroid spins every 28 minutes, how will China's robotic probe grab a sample from its craggy surface?