Updated
Updated · Nature.com · Jul 10
Near-Earth Object 1998 SH 2 Shows Cometary Activity After 27 Years of Astrometry
Updated
Updated · Nature.com · Jul 10

Near-Earth Object 1998 SH 2 Shows Cometary Activity After 27 Years of Astrometry

2 articles · Updated · Nature.com · Jul 10

Summary

  • Astronomers confirmed that near-Earth object (875163) 1998 SH 2 is active, detecting a faint coma and a tail more than 20 arcseconds long and giving it the comet designation P/1998 SH 2.
  • A 1998-2025 orbital record showed a non-gravitational acceleration of about −1.4 × 10^-11 m/s^2—10 times too large for the Yarkovsky effect—after the object missed a predicted 2025 radar pointing by 153 arcseconds.
  • Large telescopes found activity that ATLAS survey images had missed: CFHT saw a weak tail on Sept. 17, VLT confirmed a longer narrow tail on Sept. 30, and reprocessed Danish Telescope images showed it was already present by Sept. 13.
  • Dust modeling indicates grains were released continuously from roughly Aug. 29 to Sept. 7, 2025, favoring sublimation-driven outgassing over an impact or rotational shedding.
  • The finding suggests more near-Earth objects now labeled asteroids—especially 285 potentially hazardous bodies in Jupiter-family-like orbits—could be weak comets, complicating impact-risk forecasts and deflection planning.

Insights

An asteroid just became a comet. How many more unpredictable 'dark comets' are hiding near Earth?
Does this 'stealth comet' finally solve the enduring mystery of interstellar visitor ‘Oumuamua’s strange journey?

1998 SH2 Reclassified: The Discovery of a "Dark Comet" and Its Impact on NEO Risk and Cosmic Origins

Overview

For 27 years, 1998 SH2 was thought to be a typical asteroid, but in August 2025, astronomers detected a significant orbital anomaly that hinted at non-gravitational forces at work. This discovery prompted detailed investigations using advanced deep imaging techniques. Researchers then visually confirmed a faint coma and subtle tail, revealing that 1998 SH2 is actually an active comet. This reclassification challenges our understanding of near-Earth objects and highlights how careful observation and new technology can uncover hidden activity in objects once considered ordinary.

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