A SMALL object orbiting the earth may be a new moon, scientists believe. 

While it’s far, far smaller than the moon we’re used to gazing up at, the new object does appear to qualify as a moon in its own right.

Here’s everything we know so far about it.

When was the new moon discovered?

On 19 February 2020, astronomers working at Arizona’s Catalina Sky Survey noticed an object moving very quickly across the sky. It was designated 2020 CD3, with six other observatories around the world also confirming sightings of the mysterious object.

Its orbit was calculated based on the various sightings, and it was discovered that whatever it was had likely been bound to earth’s orbit for as long as three years. It’s so small that we didn’t even notice our brand new space neighbour.

The Minor Planet Centre, which monitors space’s smaller bodies, confirmed that “no link to a known artificial object had been found” making it unlikely that the new object was any form of man-made space debris.

Termed a “mini-moon”, it is thought to be an asteroid which has been captured by our planet’s gravitational pull.

How big is it?

Our new mini-moon is estimated to be about the size of a car – somewhere between 1.9 and 3.5 metres long. For comparison, earth’s main moon boasts a radius of 1,737.1 km.

The new moon orbits the earth about once every 47 days, moving along a much wider orbit than the main moon.

Sadly, for those who have become attached to their new lunar body, this orbit has been found to be unstable, meaning that the mini-moon will eventually break up with us and go shooting off back into space.

The current estimate is that it will break away some time in April, although there is some debate given the relatively small amount of data which is available to base calculations off at the current time.

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Has this happened before?

2020 CD3 isn't the first mini-moon on record. Another asteroid was swept up into the Earth’s orbit in 2006 and named 2006 RH120.

It remained orbiting the earth until the following year, when it broke away and headed back out into the vast expanse of space. However, the star-crossed pair may hook up again – 2006 RH120 is predicted to swing past the earth again in 2028.

While our planet isn’t especially large in cosmic terms, it does exert enough of a gravitational pull of its own to occasionally scoop up some of the objects that go whizzing past it.

One study even suggested that, at any given time, the earth is being accompanied on its tumble through space by at least one mini-moon, although they will mostly go undetected and undesignated. Generally, they are simply spun around and fired back out into space in a slingshot-like effect, but occasionally they enter at just the right angle to stay circling our planet for quite a while.

Thankfully, they rarely pose any kind of threat – even if 2020 CD3 were to come hurtling down towards us, it is so small that earth’s atmosphere would likely incinerate it entirely before it made it to the surface of the planet.