An Asteroid Is Going To Swing Past Earth On December 16

B00Mer

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An Asteroid Is Going To Swing Past Earth On December 16



Look alive, people. An asteroid is about to make a pretty close approach to Earth – but don't worry, there's essentially no chance it will hit us.

The asteroid is called 3200 Phaethon, named after the Greek mythological son of Helios, the Son god. The bad news is that, in Greek mythology, Phaethon nearly set Earth on fire and had to be destroyed. Eek.

The good news is that this asteroid probably won't deal us a repeat performance when it swings past our planet on December 16. But it will provide us with an exciting opportunity to study this rock as it tears through space.

"This will be the best opportunity to date for radar observations of this asteroid and we hope to obtain detailed images," said NASA.

"The images should be excellent for obtaining a detailed 3D model."

Phaethon (the asteroid) is thought to be about 5 kilometers (3 miles) across, making it the third largest near-Earth potentially hazardous asteroid (PHA). It was discovered in 1983 by NASA, with its last close approach coming in 2007.

This time around the asteroid will pass within 10 million kilometers (6.2 million miles) of our planet. That's kinda close, about 27 times further than the Moon, but nowhere near enough to be a cause for alarm. It is, however, closer than it came in 2007.

"The 2017 apparition is the closest to Earth since the asteroid's discovery so it may be possible for optical observers to detect new activity," said NASA.

Interestingly, Phaethon is thought to be responsible for the annual Geminids meteor shower on December 13 and 14, due to similarities between its orbit and the meteors.

But meteor storms are usually caused by comets, which have tails of debris trailing behind them that burn up in our atmosphere. Asteroids are not supposed to have these, so it's possible Phaethon is either breaking apart, or it's not an asteroid at all – and is, in fact, a dead comet.

So this close pass to Earth is going to be pretty exciting. There are a number of closer approaches in the next few centuries though (the next is 2050), with the closest coming on December 14, 2093. Phaethon will pass within 3 million kilometers (1.9 million miles) of our planet then. We should be fine, though.

An Asteroid Is Going To Swing Past Earth On December 16 | IFLScience



 

Danbones

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An Assteroid?...Not to worry...
:)
a democrat will grab it in the elevator
 

Curious Cdn

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An Asteroid Is Going To Swing Past Earth On December 16 ...

...pulled by a team of eight with antlers on their heads...
 

Corduroy

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Easy for you to look down upon us from the safety of your space ship you alien scum!

No it's not. I have to triangulate the telescope or some shit, and sometimes I can't even be bothered to check up on you in the morning.

"What are these assholes up to today? Ugh another ****ing Twitter war"
 

Danbones

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Oh sure, extinction is always hillaryious
:)
till it happens to you
 

Johnnny

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Third rock from the Sun
No it's not. I have to triangulate the telescope or some shit, and sometimes I can't even be bothered to check up on you in the morning.

"What are these assholes up to today? Ugh another ****ing Twitter war"

I'm the only sane inmate of Asylum Earth. I'm not eager to hand tomorrow over to an interplanetary extremist with laser eyes. There's only room on this world for one leader, Corduroy. When I'm finished with you, every last gibbon out there will know you for the menace you are..
 

OmegaOm

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I follow space.com and there is usually an asteroid passing by the Earth every month, and much closer, even between the Earth and the Moon. Its more common then most people think.
It is basically inevitable that and asteroid will hit us again.

My argument here is against the nuclear power industry.
There are about 500 nuclear power plants on Earth, Each producing 1000's of litres of radioactive waste that takes 100,000 years to become safe.
But they say nuclear power is safe. They dont consider mother nature. The tsunami in Japan is one example. A worst case scenario is a small asteroid striking the Earth near one of these places.

What are the odds. Well you remember the Russian meteor that blew up in the sky and shattered windows all around for miles 2 years ago. That was 20 meters in diameter and had a force of 500 kilo tonnes nuclear weapon. There are many of these small ones out there passing by the Earth all the time, and this one exploded near a nuclear power plan.

My point is that since an asteroid will hit us, instead of doing damage to only one area, if it strikes an area with plutonium waste, that radiation will spread throughout the atmosphere, dammaging the whole planet. Since 1 gram of the stuff if divided equal could kill the whole of Earths population imagine tonnes of this stuff all over the planet.

You may say what are the odds again. Well say a large asteroid of 1 km in size hit the Earth. That would be big enough to destroy a small country. You just need 1 power plant in that countries area, to pollute the world.

Nuclear power is not safe at all. IT is impossible to store the waste safetly for 100,000 years.
 

spaminator

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there are some scientists who believe that asteroid and comet strikes are not random but cyclical. :shock:
 

Curious Cdn

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Yes, but they move its path out to say 10 million klicks so nobody panics.

Who's "they" and how do they put a mission together and get it to something like that in time? That intersteller visitor that just zoomed through our solar system was travelling at 25.5 kilometers per second. With our current technology, we can't accelerate and travel fast enough to intercept much if anything, yet, even if there is a fully fueled launch craft ready to go at any time (which there isn't). Our descendants may be able to do what you propose in a couple of hundred years from now.
 

OmegaOm

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Who's "they" and how do they put a mission together and get it to something like that in time? That intersteller visitor that just zoomed through our solar system was travelling at 25.5 kilometers per second. With our current technology, we can't accelerate and travel fast enough to intercept much if anything, yet, even if there is a fully fueled launch craft ready to go at any time (which there isn't). Our descendants may be able to do what you propose in a couple of hundred years from now.

Point taken. Its one thing that we can catalog most of the large Near Earth asteroids. Its another to see whats coming from deep space.
In out life time, we witnessed a comet crashing into Jupiter and 2 years ago a comet from the ort cloud on a near miss to Mars. Our solar system is surrounded by a halo of comets that at any time will fall into the inner solar system. We would have at most a years time of warning.

How to protect against this. For one get rid of all nuclear power. Two, start colonizing Mars as a back up to Earth. Three have a few ready comet destroy or deflect space craft.

People who criticize the space industry should heed to this threat. It is just a matter of time. Better to think ahead. One reason to colonize Mars, incase Earth gets destroyed by asteroid or nuclear war what ever. People on Mars can come back to populate Earth when its safe.