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An asteroid up to 600m in length rushed past the Earth this morning, giving astronomers a rare and relatively close-up glimpse of such a large object in near space.
There are hundreds of thousands of asteroids in the solar system orbiting the Sun, but the next time one will race through so close to the planet will be in 2027. Asteroid 2007 TU24 was expected to pass 334,000 miles away, about 1.4 times the distance between the Earth and the Moon.
Despite the outlandish predictions of some internet pundits, the future of humanity was never at risk today. But scientists were hoping to use the fly-past to work out how best to defend the planet against asteroids in the future.
Nasa monitored it closely in an attempt to determine whether it is a solid object or simply a loose pile of space rubble.
Asteroid 2007 TU24 was only discovered on October 11 last year by the Nasa-sponsored Catalina Sky Survey at Arizona University. It is of an estimated 7,000 near-Earth objects.
The asteroid should have been visible through modest-sized telescopes with apertures of at least 7.6cm (three inches), but quickly became fainter as it moved away from the Earth.
Mike Nolan, head of radar astronomy at the Puerto Rico observatory, said: “We have good images of a couple of dozen objects like this, and for about one in ten, we see something we’ve never seen before. We really haven’t sampled the population enough to know what’s out there.”
Tomorrow, the 2007 WD5, another asteroid, is due to shoot within 16,250 miles of Mars. Initial calculations had suggested the object may collide with the red planet, but that has now been virtually discounted.
Measuring about 50 metres across, it would have delivered an impact equivalent to a three-megatonne nuclear weapon, which could have been monitored by European and US satellites positioned nearby.
A similar sized meteor exploded above Tunguska in Siberia in 1908 to devastating effect.
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To Alan Evans, Bratislava.
If an asteroid were to hit, you wouldn't have to worry about all the other things that you mentioned.
Tom Smith, Isle of Man, UK
wait, you're saying i passed an asteroid?
alan, san francisco,
These scientists who saywe should spend billions on defending the earth from collisions with asteroids are just thinking of ways to make a living. I think there are slightly more urgent things to be worrying about. Like global warming, American Imperialism, depleted uranium, poverty, AIDS, corruption in government, why politicians lie, pollution, etc etc etc.
Alan Evans, Bratislava, Slovak Republic
well i heard this in my second lesson we wer doing astronomy and my teacher told us about it amazing that it came and went so fast but the tunguska event was caused by a little piece of space junk most likley a present left by a traveling asteroid but it was only just big enough 2 enter the atmosphere so wen it hit it was like a tnt blast
michael filer, reading woodley,
I remember reading about the Tunguska event some forty years ago, but eyewitnesses in Paris, described it as a giant airship as it passed overhead, maybe the Paris newspapers carried the story, the following morning.
Clive Burghard , LANCING, England
has the asteroids passed? if yes then at what time.
tehseen, allahabad, india
this website is really interesting i really liked it
nick, doncaster, united kingdom