Home Australia Huge ‘Christmas Eve asteroid’ the size of a 10-story building will skim past Earth at 14,743mph tonight, NASA warns

Huge ‘Christmas Eve asteroid’ the size of a 10-story building will skim past Earth at 14,743mph tonight, NASA warns

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NASA has warned that the huge 'Christmas Eve asteroid' will pass Earth tonight at 14,743 mph (file image)

With Christmas Eve just around the corner, many children might expect to see Santa Claus flying overhead.

But NASA has warned that reindeer will not be the only beings soaring above Earth in the coming days.

Tonight, a huge ‘Christmas Eve asteroid’ the size of a ten-story building will skim past Earth at 23,000 km/h.

According to NASA’s Asteroid Watch dashboard, the 2024 NX1 space rock will reach its closest point to Earth at 02:56 am GMT in the early hours of Christmas Eve.

With an estimated size of 29 to 70 meters (95-230 feet) in diameter, scientists believe that 2024 NX1 could contain the destructive potential of 12 million tons of TNT.

However, although this will be a “near miss” by astronomical standards, experts say there is no chance of Christmas being ruined by a collision with this massive space rock.

The space agency estimates that the asteroid should pass harmlessly close to the planet at a distance of approximately 7.21 million kilometers.

Jess Lee, an astronomer at Royal Greenwich Observatory, told MailOnline: “It will be very far away, around 18 times further from Earth than the Moon, so with this predicted trajectory it won’t get close enough to hit Earth.” . .’

NASA has warned that the huge ‘Christmas Eve asteroid’ will pass Earth tonight at 14,743 mph (file image)

The Christmas Eve asteroid was not detected until December 12, when the planetary defense systems of NASA and the European Space Agency (ESA) noticed its approach.

After calculating its orbit, the agencies classified it as a “close approach,” meaning it is expected to pass within 4.65 million miles (7.5 million kilometers) of Earth.

However, based on the size of the asteroid and its distance from Earth, ESA only rates this approach as “very common.”

ESA has also not included 2024 XN1 on the ‘Risk List’ of objects with a non-zero probability of colliding with the planet.

This means that, despite passing within contact distance on the scale of the solar system, there is absolutely no chance of the Christmas Eve asteroid hitting Earth.

And while this is good news for Earth, at this distance the asteroid will not be visible even to an amateur astronomer using his own telescope.

However, even for a relatively small asteroid, the consequences of a possible impact would be devastating.

NASA research suggests that an asteroid 70 meters in diameter is capable of flattening an area of ​​700 square miles (2,000 square kilometers) if it collides with the planet.

Asteroid 2024 Space agencies predict that the asteroid will reach its closest point at 02:56 GMT in the early hours of Christmas Eve.

Asteroid 2024 Space agencies predict that the asteroid will reach its closest point at 02:56 GMT in the early hours of Christmas Eve.

The ‘Christmas Eve’ asteroid

Name: 2024 XN1

discovery date: December 12, 2024

Estimated diameter: 29-70 meters

Date of next approach: December 24, 2024

Closest distance to Earth: 4.48 million miles (7.21 million km)

Collision risk: Zero

Ms Lee says: “If you want to compare it to a previous asteroid impact, the Tunguska event in Russia in 1908 involved an asteroid that was roughly similar in size to this one.

‘It exploded above the ground and felled 80 million trees. Energy comparison estimates range from 3 to 30 megatons of TNT.

Fortunately, the Tunguska event occurred in an uninhabited region of Siberia, but there have been dangerous asteroid impacts in recent history.

In 2013, a meteor just 20 meters in diameter exploded 45 kilometers (28 miles) over Russia’s Chelyabinsk region.

The resulting explosion released the energy equivalent of about 440,000 tons of TNT, damaging thousands of buildings and injuring about 1,600 people.

So while the Christmas Eve asteroid has no risk of colliding with Earth, it is a stark reminder of how close the planet comes to disaster on a fairly regular basis.

After making its festive appearance next week, 2024 XN1 won’t approach Earth again until January 2032.

During this step the rock will get even closer, reaching a minimum distance of 4.7 million kilometers.

At its closest point, the Christmas Eve asteroid will pass 7.21 million kilometers from Earth. It's a near miss in astronomical terms, but there's no risk of a collision.

At its closest point, the Christmas Eve asteroid will pass 7.21 million kilometers from Earth. It’s a near miss in astronomical terms, but there’s no risk of a collision.

However, the Christmas Eve asteroid will make its closest pass in December 2106, when it will skim past Earth at a distance of just 2.11 million miles (3.4 million kilometers).

2024 XN1 won’t be the only space rock to visit Earth over the Christmas period.

Today, a small space rock called 2013 YB actually has a slim chance of crashing into Earth at 12:27 GMT.

However, at less than 3 m (10 ft) in diameter, this rock is very likely to burn up in the atmosphere, producing nothing more dangerous than a particularly bright fireball.

At this size, NASA estimates that the asteroid would break up in the atmosphere more than 43 kilometers (26 miles) above the ground, making it unlikely that small fragments would reach the ground.

Even the odds of that happening are quite low, with the ESA only predicting a one in 52,356 chance of an impact.

On Christmas Day itself, an even larger asteroid called 2021 BA2 will pass noticeably close to Earth.

Based on its brightness, ESA estimates that this space rock could be between 30 and 70 meters (100-230 feet) in diameter, making it a potential “city killer.”

The Earth constantly passes by large space rocks, some of which (pictured) have a chance of colliding with the planet. If an asteroid the size of 2024 XN1 hit Earth it would explode with the energy of 12 million tons of TNT.

The Earth constantly passes by large space rocks, some of which (pictured) have a chance of colliding with the planet. If an asteroid the size of 2024 XN1 hit Earth it would explode with the energy of 12 million tons of TNT.

At 21:19 pm GMT on Christmas Day, 2021 BA2 will reach its closest point to Earth, passing just 2.76 million kilometers (1.71 million miles).

But at more than seven times the distance to the Moon, space agencies do not predict any risk of collision between the asteroid and the planet.

The next truly large asteroid to pass Earth won’t be until January 5, 2025, when a 400 m (1,310 ft) asteroid will pass close to the planet.

This Eiffel Tower-sized space rock will pass Earth at 49,660 miles per hour (79,920 kmph), reaching its closest point just 2.29 million miles (3.68 million kilometers) from Earth.

WHAT COULD WE DO TO PREVENT AN ASTEROID FROM COLLIDING WITH THE EARTH?

Currently, NASA would not be able to deflect an asteroid if it were headed toward Earth, but it could mitigate the impact and take steps that would protect lives and property.

This would include evacuating the impact area and moving key infrastructure.

Knowing the trajectory, size, shape, mass, composition and rotation dynamics of the orbit would help experts determine the severity of a possible impact.

However, the key to mitigating damage is to find any potential threats as soon as possible.

NASA and the European Space Agency completed a test that crashed a refrigerator-sized spacecraft into the Dimorphos asteroid.

The test is to see if small satellites are able to prevent asteroids from colliding with Earth.

The Double Asteroid Redirection Test (DART) used what is known as a kinetic impactor technique: hitting the asteroid to change its orbit.

The impact could change the speed of a threatening asteroid by a small fraction of its total speed, but if done well before the expected impact, this small nudge will eventually add up to a large change in the asteroid’s trajectory away from Earth. .

This was the first mission to demonstrate an asteroid deflection technique for planetary defense.

The test results are expected to be confirmed by the Hera mission in December 2026.

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