Astrophyzix Near-Earth Object (NEO) Close Approach Report: (2026 GD) — Updated Solution (JPL 2) - Real Time NEO News
Written by: Astrophyzix Digital Observatory
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Introduction
Asteroid (2026 GD) is an Apollo-class near-Earth object (NEO) currently undergoing rapid orbital refinement following its recent discovery in April 2026. This report is a follow-up of our initial report and is based on the updated JPL solution (Solution 2), incorporating an expanded observational dataset and improved orbital constraints.
The object is notable for an exceptionally close Earth flyby occurring on April 9, 2026, within lunar distance. Although the orbit remains classified with moderate uncertainty, current data provides a consistent and stable close-approach solution with no indication of impact risk.
Key Takeaways
- Very close Earth approach on 2026-Apr-09 at 22:59 (TBD) at ~0.00168 AU.
- Equivalent to approximately 0.65 lunar distances (~251,000 km).
- Relative velocity: ~12.66 km/s.
- Small object (~20–30 meters estimated diameter).
- Earth MOID: 0.000525 AU (very low orbital intersection distance).
- Orbit refined using 117 observations over 2 days.
- Condition code remains 7 (moderate uncertainty).
- No impact threat identified.
Scientific Consensus Snapshot
The updated orbital solution reflects improved constraint quality due to an increased number of observations and an extended data arc. While uncertainties have decreased across all orbital parameters, the orbit remains in an early refinement stage.
Close approach predictions are now more precise, particularly in timing, but continued observation is required to fully stabilise the solution.

