TitanRZ said:
...Not wanting too much to ask. There is any software or math formula to calculate this?
I wonder what is the maximum size of this asteroid.
If you have a Windows computer you can use Gravity Simulator, which is a program I wrote, to try out different capture scenerios:
www.gravitysimulator.com
Asteroids can get captured through the L1 or L2 regions. This happened in 2006. Asteroid 2006 RH120 (aka 6R10DB9) was captured into Earth orbit in the L1 region. It orbited Earth for 15 months before escaping Earth orbit through the L2 region. This object is beleived to be 3-6 meters in diameter. For every object 3-6 meters in diameter, there are probably thousands of objects 3-6 cm in diameter. So I think it is highly likely that Earth has some meteoroids orbiting it now. Asteroids captured in this manner don't stay very long. They need to lose energy so the can't climb back out to the L1 or L2 regions.
Here's a link to a Gravity Simulator simulation I did with this object. You can download the simulation and run it on your own computer: http://www.orbitsimulator.com/cgi-bin/yabb/YaBB.pl?num=1182030550/0#0
The Moon can help capture an asteroid with a gravitational assist that robs the asteroid of energy. But such an asteroid would be in a Moon-crossing orbit, and would probably only complete a few orbits before the Moon ejects it.
An asteroid can also graze Earth's atmosphere, robbing it of energy and capturing it into Earth orbit. But such an asteroid would always have its perigee inside Earth's atmosphere, so it would sprial down before crashing into Earth. There was some speculation that this happened (10-20 years ago I think), when a group of observers saw a bright fireball that escaped back into space. Hours later, and hundreds of miles away another group of observers saw a bright fireball. This caused some to speculate that it was the same object. The first pass through the atmosphere captured it into an elliptical orbit. The second pass through destroyed it.
One possible way of capturing an asteroid into a stable orbit is to have a double asteroid pass through the Earth/Moon system. As it gets close to Earth, the pair of asteroids become unbound from each other, one gaining energy and one losing energy, with the one losing energy being left in a stable orbit. Some think that this is how Neptune captured Triton.
Stable prograde orbits can not exist beyond the Moon's orbit. The Moon would destabalize them. But stable retrograde orbits can exist beyond the Moon's orbit out to about 800,000 km.
Once asteroids get as large as Ceres, we stop calling them asteroids, and start calling them dwarf planets. Ceres, at 1/77 the mass of the Moon, is not massive enough to disrupt the Earth / Moon system. So the answer to "how big" is as big as you want.