If a small object (say mass 1 kg), at the opposite side of the earth's orbit (six months away), was placed in the same orbital position as the earth's core, at zero velocity in all directions, would the object collide with the earth or would it have been drawn by the sun's gravity away from a collision with earth?
A naive answer would simply calculate how far "inward" the object would travel in six months, when accelerated by the sun's gravity, and if the distance covered is greater than the earth's radius, a collision would be averted.
But I started thinking about the earth's own gravitational influence as it orbited closer to the object.
How would we get an answer to this question?