The Alvarez hypothesis, proposed by the father and son duo Luis and Walter Alvarez in 1980, states that an asteroid struck Earth more than 65 million years ago and kicked off the extinction of dinosaurs. Although its impact crater has been presumed to be in Mexico, new light has now been shed on how it reached Earth. According to the English physicist Brian Cox, the asteroid, which formed a 140-kilometer impact crater, was thrown off its course by Jupiter, the largest planet in our Solar System.
“It is highly likely or possible that it was deflected into a collision course with Earth by Jupiter,” Cox said in a YouTube shorts video shared by @tech_topia, highlighting that Jupiter is the creator and destroyer of worlds.
NASA has now revealed that an asteroid is expected to miss Earth today and while it isn't expected to impact the surface, it could pass by very closely. Know details of its close approach.
NASA's Planetary Defense Coordination Office (PDCO), which is responsible for monitoring the skies against the threat of rogue asteroids, has issued a warning against the close approach of an asteroid designated as Asteroid 2023 PM1. The space rock will make its closest approach to Earth today, August 21, and will miss the planet by a distance of 3.1 million kilometers. It has been tracked in its orbit, travelling at a speed of almost 66858 kilometers per hour.
While this asteroid is not a planet killer or as big as the dinosaur-killing asteroid, it is still huge.NASA estimates it to be around 220 feet wide, making it almost as big as an aircraft!
It belongs to the Apollo group of Near-Earth Asteroids, which are Earth-crossing space rocks with semi-major axes larger than Earth's. These asteroids are named after the humongous
Read more on tech.hindustantimes.com