Site icon Dispatch Today News

Asteroid passing by Earth on March 21 poses no risks

An artist’s illustration of an asteroid flyby (Credit: NASA)

ANKARA – A large asteroid, around 0.9 kilometers (.56 miles) wide, will pass close by the Earth on March 21, US space agency NASA said Thursday.

Called 2001 FO32, it will make its closest approach to the Earth at a distance of 2 million kilometers (1.25 million miles), according to the NASA-owned Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL), managed by the California Institute of Technology.

The distance is more than five times the distance between the Earth and the Moon, and there is no risk the asteroid will collide with our planet, but its close proximity will give astronomers a rare opportunity to observe this rocky relic that formed at the dawn of our solar system, JPL said.

“There is no chance the asteroid will get any closer to Earth than 1.25 million miles,” reassured Paul Chodas, director of the Center for Near Earth Object Studies at JPL, in a statement.

The asteroid is estimated to pass the Earth at a velocity of 124,000 kilometers (77,000 miles) per hour, which is faster than the speed of most asteroids passing the Earth. .

JPL said the massive rock will not come this close to the Earth until the year 2052, when it will pass us again at a distance of 1.75 million miles (2.8 million kilometers). (Anadolu)

Exit mobile version