(367789) 2011 AG5
, provisional designation, is a sub-kilometer asteroid, classified as near-Earth object and potentially hazardous asteroid of the Apollo group. It has a diameter of about. It was removed from the Sentry Risk Table on 21 December 2012 and as such it now has a rating of 0 on the Torino Scale. It was recovered in December 2022 extending the observation arc from 4.8 years to 14 years. As of 2023, the distance between the orbits of Earth and is
| Date | JPL Horizons nominal geocentric distance | uncertainty region |
| 2023-Feb-03 08:51 ± 00:01 | ± | |
| 2040-Feb-04 08:29 ± 00:06 | ± |
Description
was discovered on 8 January 2011 by the Mount Lemmon Survey at an apparent magnitude of 19.6 using a reflecting telescope. Pan-STARRS precovery images from 8 November 2010 extended the observation arc to 317 days. Observations by the Gemini telescope at Mauna Kea recovered the asteroid on 20, 21 and 27 October 2012, and extended the observation arc to 719 days.The October 2012 observations reduced the orbit uncertainties by more than a factor of 60, meaning that the Earth's position in February 2040 no longer falls within the range of possible future paths for the asteroid. On 4 February 2040 the asteroid will pass no closer than from Earth. Until 21 December 2012 it was listed on the Sentry Risk Table with a rating on the Torino Scale of Level 1. A Torino rating of 1 is a routine discovery in which a pass near the Earth is predicted that poses no unusual level of danger. It is estimated that an impact would produce the equivalent of 100 megatons of TNT, roughly twice that of the most powerful nuclear weapon ever detonated. This is powerful enough to damage a region at least a hundred miles wide.