HomeNear-Earth Objects2026 MQ3

2026 MQ3

2026 MQ3
Potentially hazardousAPO~152 m
Current distance from Earth
15,168,273 km
39.5 lunar distances · 0.101 AU
Heliocentric orbit · live
Earth2026 MQ3 top-down view of the ecliptic plane
Next close approach
2026-Jul-16
Passes 12.4 lunar distances from Earth — about 4,776,073 km, closing at 8.7 km/s.
Orbit class
APO
around the Sun
Orbital period
1.82 yr
664 days
Diameter
152 m
comparable to the Eiffel Tower’s height
Eccentricity
0.365
orbit shape
Inclination
6.5°
to the ecliptic
Discovered
Frequently asked questions
How close does 2026 MQ3 come to Earth?
Its next notable close approach is on 2026-Jul-16, when it passes about 12.4 lunar distances from Earth — roughly 4,776,073 km. 2026 MQ3 is currently about 39 lunar distances away — the live orbit and distance are shown above.
Is 2026 MQ3 going to hit Earth?
No impact is predicted. 2026 MQ3 is classified as a potentially hazardous asteroid, which means its orbit brings it relatively close to Earth — but classification is about proximity, not an impending collision. Its trajectory is continuously refined as new observations are gathered, and predicted close approaches are calculated decades ahead. Its live position and orbit are shown above.
How big is 2026 MQ3?
2026 MQ3 is estimated at about 152 m across — comparable to the Eiffel Tower’s height. Size estimates are derived from how bright the asteroid appears and refined by radar and thermal measurements when it passes close to Earth.
What kind of orbit does 2026 MQ3 have?
2026 MQ3 is APO object. It orbits the Sun once every 1.82 years, on an elliptical path that reaches beyond Earth’s orbit and swings back toward the Sun. The interactive orbit diagram above shows where it is right now.
Can I see 2026 MQ3 through a telescope?
Most of the time 2026 MQ3 is far too faint to see, but during a close approach it can brighten enough for amateur telescopes. Check the close-approach date above, then plan your night with our sky and space-weather tools.
Related near-earth objects
Apophis
375 m · Aten · PHA
Bennu
490 m · Apollo · PHA
Didymos
780 m · Apollo · PHA
Ryugu
900 m · Apollo · PHA
All near-earth objects Spacecraft & missions Space weather Worlds Moon globe