KHQ.COM - An asteroid half the size of a
football field will give Earth the ultimate close shave this month,
passing closer than many satellites when it whizzes by, but it won't hit
the planet, NASA scientists say.
The asteroid 2012 DA14
will fly by Earth on Feb. 15 and zip within 17,200 miles (27, 680
kilometers) of the planet during the cosmic close encounter. The
asteroid will approach much closer to Earth than the moon, and well
inside the paths of navigation and communications satellites.
"This is a record-setting close approach," Don Yeomans,
the head of NASA's asteroid-tracking program, said in a statement.
"Since regular sky surveys began in the 1990s, we've never seen an
object this big get so close to Earth."
Asteroid 2012 DA14
was discovered last year by an amateur team of stargazers at the La
Sagra Sky Survey observatory in Spain. Yeomans stressed that, while the
asteroid's approach bring it closer than the geosynchronous satellites
orbiting 22,245 miles (35,800 km) above Earth, 2012 DA14 poses no threat of a deadly collision with the planet. [See Don Yeomans Explain Asteroid 2012 DA14 (Video)]
"2012 DA14 will definitely
not hit Earth. The orbit of the asteroid is known well enough to rule
out an impact," Yeomans, who heads the Near-Earth Object Program at
NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif. He added that the
odds it will slam into a satellite are "extremely remote."
A fairly typical asteroid
like 2012 DA14 — which measures 150 feet (45 meters) across — zips by
Earth about every 40 years, but only strikes every 1,200 years, Yeomans
estimated, and the impact of such an object would not be catastrophic
over a wide area.
Asteroid 2012 DA14 is about
the same size of the object that exploded in the atmosphere above
Siberia in 1908, leveling hundreds of square miles in what scientists
now call the "Tunguska Event," NASA officials explained.
Yeomans said an asteroid
similar in size to 2012 DA14 slammed into Earth 50,000 years ago to
create the famed Meteor Crater in Arizona. But the Meteor Crater
asteroid was made of iron, which made its impact especially strong.
When asteroid 2012 DA14 zooms by Earth, NASA scientists
will be tracking the space rock closely. The space agency plans to use
its Goldstone radar in California's Mojave Desert to follow the asteroid
from Feb. 16 to Feb. 20. The observation campaign should help
astronomers build a 3D map asteroid 2012 DA14, as well as refine
estimates on the space rock's shape, spin and reflectivity, NASA
officials said.
Since the object will be
moving across the sky so fast, only the most experienced amateur
astronomers are likely to catch its close pass. But it could be a
challenge.
"The asteroid will be racing
across the sky, moving almost a full degree (or twice the width of a
full moon) every minute," Yeomans said. "That's going to be hard to
track."