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Asteroid that whizzed by Earth has its own moon

As the asteroid 2004 BL86 made its closest approach to Earth Monday, NASA scientists noticed it wasn't traveling alone.

Data collected by NASA's 230-foot-wide Deep Space Network antenna at Goldstone, Calif., as the asteroid passed about 800,000 miles from Earth (just over three times the distance from Earth to the moon) produced 20 radar images that revealed the asteroid has a small moon of its own.

The moon is about 230 feet across, circling the asteroid, which is approximately 1,100 feet in diameter. In the world of near-Earth asteroids, about 16 percent of asteroids this size have a smaller asteroid moon orbiting them.

The asteroid won't come this close again for 200 years, and the next space rock to approach this near to Earth will be asteroid 1999 AN10, when it passes by in 2027.

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