Mark
August 26th, 2032 on your calendar, folks. Ukrainian astronomers have
just detected a 1,350-foot-wide (410 meter) minor planet that’s headed
our way. The impact risk is minimal, but it’s now the most serious
near-term celestial threat to face our planet.
I
tend to shrug off this sort of stuff when I encounter it, but the sheer
size of this asteroid, along with its near-term potential, made me
curious. So I headed over to NASA’S Near Earth Object Program website to see if it was added it to its Torino Scale — a regularly updated chart that designates asteroid impact risk by category.
Not only
was it there, it was at the top of the recently observed list — and all
lit up in green, indicating that it's something we should probably keep
our eye on.
And indeed,
the asteroid, which was initially discovered by astronomers working at
the Crimean Astrophysical Observatory in southern Ukraine, has now been
confirmed by other scientists in Italy, Spain, the UK, and Russia’s
Siberian republic of Buryatia.
A Torino
Scale rating of 1 (out of 10), which is shown in green, indicates an
event that "merits careful monitoring." It's described as
A routine discovery in which a pass near the Earth is predicted that poses no unusual level of danger. Current calculations show the chance of collision is extremely unlikely with no cause for public attention or public concern. New telescopic observations very likely will lead to re-assignment to Level 0.
But it is considered potentially hazardous because its orbit will bring it closer than 7.5 million km from Earth’s orbit.
In this case, TV135 could come as close as 1.7 million km. Size also
matters when it comes to risk assessment. If it were to hit us, it would
unleash 2,500 megatons of TNT — 50 times greater than the biggest
nuclear bomb ever detonated.
The newly
discovered asteroid, named 2013 TV135, now joins 2007 VK184 as the only
Torino Scale 1 objects known to astronomers. Asteroid VK184, which is
603 feet (184 meters) in diameter, has a 1 in 1,750 chance of hitting
the Earth between 2048 to 2075.
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Thankfully,
the risk posed by TV135 is extremely low — but not impossibly low.
Current best estimates show that it has a 1 in 63,000 chance of
colliding with Earth in 2032. That means it has a 99.9984% chance of
missing the Earth. This number could either go up or down as new
measurements are made over the coming years.
Asteroid defense system, anyone?
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