Icarus orbits the Sun at a distance of 0.19–1.97
AU once every 13 months (409 days;
semi-major axis of 1.08 AU). Its orbit has an
eccentricity of 0.83 and an
inclination of 23
° with respect to the
ecliptic. The body's
observation arc begins with its official discovery observation at Palomar in 1949. At
perihelion, Icarus comes closer to the
Sun than
Mercury, i.e. it is a
Mercury-crossing asteroid. It is also a
Venus and
Mars-crosser. From 1949 until the discovery of
3200 Phaethon in 1983, it was known as the asteroid that passed closest to the Sun. Since then hundreds of Mercury-crossers have been found, the closest ones are now being and
(also see ).
Meteor shower Icarus is thought to be the source of the
Arietids, a strong daylight
meteor shower. However other objects such as the short-period Sun-grazing comet
96P/Machholz are also possible candidates for the shower's origin.
Close approaches Icarus has an Earth
minimum orbital intersection distance (MOID) of , which translates into 13.7
lunar distances (LD). This
near-Earth object and
potentially hazardous asteroid makes close approaches to
Earth in June at intervals of 9, 19, or 28 years. On 14 June 1968, it came as close as . During this approach, Icarus became the first minor planet to be observed using
radar, with measurements obtained at the
Haystack Observatory and the
Goldstone Tracking Station. The last close approach was on 16 June 2015, when Icarus passed Earth at . Before that, the previous close approach was on 11 June 1996, at , almost 40 times as far as the Moon. The next notably close approach will be on 13 June 2043, at from Earth. == Naming ==