Over the course of Earth's 4.5 billion-year-old history, there have been several major asteroid impacts that have had a significant impact on the future of the planet and helped humanity to emerge as a dominant force. Perhaps the most consequential impact occurred almost 65 million years ago when a mammoth 12-kilometer-wide asteroid crashed into the surface and obliterated nearly 70 percent of Earth's species including dinosaurs. The crater where the asteroid crashed can still be found today in the Yucatan Peninsula in Mexico. Such large asteroids have the potential to cause global devastation if they crash. Fortunately, NASA and other space agencies now have an arsenal of space and ground-based telescopes to discover and track them.
Using such high-tech instruments, NASA has issued details about an asteroid that is set to pass by Earth today, October 3.
According to the Center for Near-Earth Object Studies (CNEOS), this Near-Earth Asteroid (NEA) is expected to make its closest approach to Earth today, October 3. Whilst this space rock will come very close to the planet, it is not expected to impact the surface. According to NASA, Asteroid 2008 QY will pass by Earth at a distance of around 6.3 million kilometers.
It is already on its way toward the planet, travelling at a blistering speed of 75457 kilometers per hour. What also raises concern is the asteroid's size. According to NASA, Asteroid 2008 QY is a Potentially Hazardous Asteroid. NASA classifies asteroids as ‘Potentially Hazardous' if they come within 7.5 million kilometers of Earth and have a size bigger than 492 meters. With a width of nearly 2200 feet, it is almost as big as a bridge!
It has been added to NASA's Close Approaches list and has also been declared as
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