Wake-up
call or omen? Three ‘near’ misses in one weekend
An
asteroid as big as a city block shot relatively close past Earth at
the weekend
11
March, 2013
Discovered
just six days ago, the 140m Asteroid 2013 ET passed about 966000km
from Earth on Saturday. That is about 2.5 times as far as the moon,
fairly close on a cosmic yardstick.
"The
scary part of this one is that it is something we didn't even know
about," Patrick Paolucci, president of Slooh Space Camera, said
during a webcast featuring live images of the asteroid from a
telescope in the Canary Islands.
Moving
at a speed of about 41843km/h, the asteroid could have wiped out a
large city if it had hit Earth, added Slooh telescope engineer Paul
Cox.
Asteroid
2013 ET is nearly eight times larger than the bus-sized asteroid that
exploded over Chelyabinsk, Russia last month, injuring 1500 people.
The force of the explosion, equivalent to about 440 kilotons of
dynamite, created a shock wave that shattered windows and damaged
buildings.
Later
that day, a small asteroid, known as DA14, passed about 27680km from
Earth, closer than the orbiting networks of communications and
weather satellites.
"One
of the reasons we're finding more of these objects is that there are
more people looking," Cox said.
Two
other small asteroids, both about the size of the Russian meteor,
were in Earth's neighbourhood at the weekend. Asteroid 2013 EC 20
passed just 4828km away on Saturday, said Cox.
Yesterday,
Asteroid 2013 EN 20 flew about 449007km away from Earth.
"We
know the solar system is a busy place," said Cox. "We're
not sitting here on our pale-blue dot on our own in nice safety .
This should be a wake-up call to governments."
The
US Congress has asked Nasa to find and track all near-Earth objects
of 1km or larger in diameter. Nasa estimates about 95% have been
identified. But only about 10% of smaller asteroids have been
discovered, it says.
The
effort is intended to give scientists and engineers as much time as
possible to learn if an asteroid or comet is on a collision course
with Earth, in hopes of sending up a spacecraft or taking other
measures to avert catastrophe.
About
100 tons of material from space hits Earth every day.
Astronomers
expect an object about the size of the Russian meteor to strike about
every 100 years
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