NASA monitors a new asteroid with minimal chance of hitting Earth in 2046

NASA monitors a new asteroid with minimal chance of hitting Earth in 2046


Asteroid 2023 DW measures about 50m in diameter and was discovered in February. It will approach Earth and have a 99.82% chance of “missing” our planet

This Tuesday (7), the NASA has announced that it is monitoring the asteroid 2023 DW, a nearly 50m-diameter space rock that is unlikely to hit Earth on February 14, 2046. And rest assured: according to the European Space Agency’s Coordination Center for Near-Earth Objects, the possibility of rock “missing” from our planet is 99.82%.




According to preliminary data, the asteroid is located 0.12 astronomical units from Earth, with each unit representing the distance between our planet and the Sun. It takes 271 days to complete one orbit around the Sun, and during the closest approach, it will be 1.8 million kilometers from Earth, a very safe distance.

In a publication on Twitter, NASA explained that the asteroid is new and will still be monitored. “When new objects are discovered, it takes a few weeks for [coleta de] data to reduce the uncertainties and predict their orbits in the future,” they explained.

The asteroid was discovered in February, and as of this Tuesday (7), orbital analyzes of the asteroid have been made based on just 62 observations. It appears to be about 50 m in diameter, nearly three times the size of the 18 m-diameter meteor that

exploded over Chelyabinsk

Russia, in 2013. The shock wave released by the explosion destroyed windows and parts of buildings in six cities in Russia.

At the moment, the asteroid is rated 1 on the so-called Scala Torino, a system with a scale from 0 to 10 that categorizes possible impact events with the Earth. The classification in question indicates that the asteroid poses no risk to us and that it has extremely low impact chances.

Additionally, the asteroid tops the European Space Agency’s list of dangerous objects, another common classification for recently discovered objects. Over the course of observations over the next few days and weeks, scientists will refine data from DW’s 2023 orbit and possibly the possibility of possible collision it will fall further.

Source: NASA, EarthSky

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