Visible and near-infrared observations of asteroid 2012 DA14 during its closest approach of February 15, 2013
J. de Leon, J. L. Ortiz, N. Pinilla-Alonso, A. Cabrera-Lavers, A., Alvarez-Candal, N. Morales, R. Duffard, P. Santos-Sanz, J. Licandro, A., Perez-Romero, V. Lorenzi, and S. Cikota

TL;DR
This study provides detailed visible and near-infrared observations of asteroid 2012 DA14 during its close approach in 2013, revealing its spectral type, rotation, shape, and physical properties.
Contribution
First detailed ground-based observational characterization of asteroid 2012 DA14 during its close approach, including spectral classification, rotation period, and physical properties.
Findings
Classified as an L-type asteroid with a composition similar to carbonaceous chondrites.
Determined a rotational period of approximately 8.95 hours.
Estimated an elongated shape with an approximate diameter of 18 meters.
Abstract
Near-Earth asteroid 2012 DA14 made its closest approach on February 15, 2013, when it passed at a distance of 27,700 km from the Earth's surface. It was the first time an asteroid of moderate size was predicted to approach that close to the Earth, becoming bright enough to permit a detailed study from ground-based telescopes. Asteroid 2012 DA14 was poorly characterized before its closest approach. We acquired data using several telescopes on four Spanish observatories: the 10.4m Gran Telescopio Canarias (GTC) and the 3.6m Telescopio Nazionale Galileo (TNG), both in the El Roque de los Muchachos Observatory (ORM, La Palma); the 2.2m CAHA telescope, in the Calar Alto Observatory (Almeria); the f/3 0.77m telescope in the La Hita Observatory (Toledo); and the f/8 1.5m telescope in the Sierra Nevada Observatory (OSN, Granada). We obtained visible and near-infrared color photometry, visible…
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