Huge Asteroid To Fly Past Earth On Monday

B00Mer

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Sep 6, 2008
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Huge Asteroid To Fly Past Earth On Monday

A rock the length of six football pitches will miss us by 745,000 miles - a relative near miss in astronomical terms.



An asteroid measuring up to 1,800ft across will hurtle past the Earth on Monday, NASA scientists say.

The rock, called 2004 BL86, will miss us by 745,000 miles - about three times the distance between the Earth and the Moon - and amateur astronomers should be able to see it with telescopes and binoculars.

Experts say it will be the closest encounter with a huge asteroid until 2027, when 1999 AN10 flies by.

It will also be the closest 2004 BL86 gets to the Earth for another 200 years.

The asteroid was discovered in 2004 and is estimated to be about one-third of a mile in size - around the length of six football pitches.

Don Yeomans, from NASA's Near Earth Object Program Office at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, California, said: "While it poses no threat to Earth for the foreseeable future, it's a relatively close approach by a relatively large asteroid, so it provides us a unique opportunity to observe and learn more."

Scientists plan to use microwaves to create radar-generated images of the asteroid during its closest approach to Earth.

"When we get our radar data back the day after the flyby, we will have the first detailed images," said radar astronomer Lance Benner.



"At present, we know almost nothing about the asteroid, so there are bound to be surprises."

Asteroids provided Earth with the building blocks of life and much of its water, and in the future may become valuable sources of mineral ores, scientists believe.



source: Huge Asteroid To Fly Past Earth On Monday
 

damngrumpy

Executive Branch Member
Mar 16, 2005
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We are in a cosmic shooting gallery and have been since time began
Yes it is close but close is relative in most minds, for many if they can't
see it and be concerned about it it isn't there. that attitude is the most
dangerous the dinosaurs weren't concerned either and we see their
fate dug up in the earth from time to time
 

#juan

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Aug 30, 2005
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I think if life on Earth is doomed to be obliterated, we're probably better off living blissfully unaware. Can you imagine the profit-wringing panic otherwise?

I don't know wolf. The asteroids have been here at least as long as we have. The last significant damage was the dinosaur killer, a few million years ago. It would have killed us as well as the dinosaurs had we been here at the time. I suppose there is no guarantee that another big one won't happen by and blow the place up again. We are getting to the point where we know when and where the next big one will hit and do something about it. I hope.....:smile:
 

WLDB

Senate Member
Jun 24, 2011
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I think if life on Earth is doomed to be obliterated, we're probably better off living blissfully unaware. Can you imagine the profit-wringing panic otherwise?


All life on earth is doomed. We're mortal. We know it.