NASA said it was travelling at about 124,000 kph (77,000 mph).
"Oh yes, friends! Do you see this dot of light? This dot of light is the asteroid," exclaimed astrophysicist Gianluca Masi of the Italy-based Virtual Telescope Project, which had trained its lenses on the rock on Monday soon after its nearest approach.
"How happy I am, how proud I am, how I excited I am... to bring this to you live," said Masi as he displayed a grainy image of a pale dot during a YouTube broadcast.
Astronomers were hoping to get a better understanding of the composition of the estimated 900-metre (3,000-ft) diameter rock as it zoomed by.
"When sunlight hits an asteroid's surface, minerals in the rock absorb some wavelengths while reflecting others," NASA said.
"By studying the spectrum of light reflecting off the surface, astronomers can measure the chemical 'fingerprints' of the minerals on the surface of the asteroid."
Because of its elongated orbit, NASA said it "picks up speed like a skateboarder rolling down a halfpipe, and then slows after being flung back out into deep space and swinging back toward the Sun".
Potential threats
The study of asteroids and comets that come this close to our planet—dubbed Near-Earth Object, or NEO—gives scientists a better understanding of the history and dynamics of the solar system.
It is also a valuable database of potential threats—an impact by a huge rock from space could devastate the entire planet.
Around 80 to 100 tonnes of material such as dust and small meteorites fall on Earth every day, according to NASA, posing no serious threat, but larger objects can cause major destruction as they possess immense momentum because of their high speed.
In 2013, an object close to 60 meters wide exploded over the Russian city of Chelyabinsk, unleashing 30 times the force of the nuclear bomb dropped over Hiroshima during World War II.
Experts estimate such events take place once or twice a century, and hits by bigger objects are even more infrequent.
NASA has said more than 95 percent of near-Earth asteroids the size of 2001 FO32 or larger have been catalogued and none of them has any chance of impacting our planet over the next century.
The agency is studying potential ways to thwart an impact by an asteroid or comet, including slamming spacecraft into the object to divert it and even nuclear explosions as a last resort.
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© 2021 AFP