2011 ES4


is an Apollo near-Earth asteroid roughly in diameter. It was first observed on 2 March 2011 when the asteroid was about from Earth and had a solar elongation of 159 degrees. It passed closest approach to Earth on 13 March 2011. Before the 2020 approach, the asteroid had a short observation arc of 4 days and had not been observed since March 2011. The asteroid was expected to pass within 1 lunar distance of Earth in early September 2020, but did not. There was no risk of a 2020 impact because the line of variation did not pass through where Earth would be, and the closest possible 2020 Earth approach was about. One line of variation showed the asteroid passing closest to Earth on 5 September 2020 at with a magnitude of 23, which would place it near the limiting magnitude of even the best automated astronomical surveys.
was recovered as P1154IU on 5 September 2020 at apparent magnitude 18. It passed from Earth on 2 September 2020. With the observation arc being extended to 9 years, it was removed from the Sentry Risk Table on 6 September 2020.

2019

NEODyS and JPL Horizons show the asteroid came to opposition around 8–13 December 2019 at around apparent magnitude 24.8. During opposition, the uncertainty in the asteroid's sky position covered about 3.8 degrees of the sky.

2020

On 2 September 2020 the asteroid passed from Earth and was recovered as P1154IU at apparent magnitude 18 on 5 September 2020.
Prior to its recovery in 2020, had a short 4-day observation arc. Around 1 September 2020, it was expected to pass about from Earth but could also pass as far away as, which could make it much fainter and harder to spot again. It could have been around magnitude 22–24 with recovery efforts challenged by the brightness of a 2 September full Moon. Opposition from the Sun did not occur until mid-September. There was no risk of impact as the line of variation did not pass through where Earth would be, which computed a closest possible approach of. JPL Horizons predicted the asteroid to be hidden in the Sun's glare until hours before closest approach. NEODyS did not expect the asteroid to be more than 50 degrees from the Sun until 30 August.

2055

With a 9-year observation arc it is known that the asteroid will be from Earth on 2 September 2055 and therefore there is no risk of an impact. When there was only a short 4-day observation arc, the Sentry Risk Table showed an estimated 1 in 67000 chance of the asteroid impacting Earth on 2 September 2055. The nominal JPL Horizons 2 September 2055 Earth distance was estimated at with a 3-sigma uncertainty of ±40 trillion km.
With a diameter between the 20-meter Chelyabinsk meteor and the 50-meter Tunguska event, 2011 ES4 has the potential to do structural damage to a city since asteroids around a diameter of 40 meters can cause wood-frame buildings to collapse. However, as there are numerous variables, the actual effect of an impact might be similar to the smaller of these two events with widespread injuries and damage to buildings if it occurred over a populated area. At 25 meters in diameter it would be a blast equivalent to the high altitude air detonation of a nuclear weapon of around half a megaton yield.

2121

Around 3 September 2121, it is expected to pass between and from Earth.