Eric Christensen at Catalina has found a nice NEO that will be coming within the Moon's distance _tonight_. It will reach mag 13.5-14 at its brightest, and be well-placed in the mid-evening sky. Details are here: http://cfa-www.harvard.edu/mpec/K07/K07B15.html ...which includes an ephemeris, but note that because of the small distance, you'll need a topocentric ephemeris to find it. Use the JPL NEO page to get one: http://neo.jpl.nasa.gov/orbits (2007 BD has just been announced, so isn't in the JPL system as I write this, but hopefully they'll get it in before the end of the work day). Minimum distance is about 200,000 miles at about 10pm local time this evening. Notional object-size is about 15 meters (house-sized). The usual 'lore' is that there are one or two such objects always within a lunar radius from Earth. Usually none are actually detected. However, at the moment we know of the second one, also found by Christensen. It is 2007 BB, and will come just within the Moon's distance in a couple of days. It is both smaller and more distant, so won't get any brighter than mag 16.5. Details for that one are here: http://cfa-www.harvard.edu/mpec/K07/K07B13.html \Brian -- See message header for info on list archives or unsubscribing, and please send personal replies to the author, not the list.