We don't miss anything, and after fires, locusts and pandemics it was time for asteroids. NASA has shared the incredible photo of what will "graze" the Earth this week.
The asteroid, called 1992 OR2, it should measure between 1,8 km and 4,1 km in diameter. In a nutshell, it means that the space rock could be up to five times larger than Burj Khalifa, the tallest building in the world! 1998 OR2 will fly over the Earth tomorrow and the scientists of the Arecibo Radar took a nice picture of it, sharing it with us.
In the tweet with which they accompanied the image they reassured that the observations continue taking into account the current health measures. Noting a curious detail: “This week we observed asteroid 1998 OR2 approaching Earth 1998. It appears to be wearing a mask!”
The asteroid will cross our planet around 11:56 am (Italian time) tomorrow, Wednesday 29 April 2020. At that point it will be approximately 6,2 million km from Earth.
During the passage, 1998 OR2 will travel at staggering speeds of 31200 kilometers per hour. Almost 10 times the speed of a bullet.
While this might seem distant, (and indeed we won't see it from here with the naked eye) it is classified as a "close approach" by NASA.
How can we see 1998 OR2, then?
The Virtual Telescope Project in Rome will host a free online public viewing of the asteroid on April 29, 2020, so you can see the passage here at this link.
Luckily, the chances of the huge asteroid colliding with Earth are extremely low. However, NASA has not written off the possibilities of an asteroid collision in the near future. NASA discovers about 30 new “near-Earth objects” (NEOs) every week and by early 2019 it had discovered a total of more than 19.000 objects. The space agency warned that its NEO catalog is not complete, meaning an unanticipated impact could occur at any time.
Experts estimate that the impact of an object the size of the one that exploded over Chelyabinsk, Russia, in 2013 (about 17 meters) occurs once or twice a century. Impacts of larger objects are expected to be much less frequent (on the scale of centuries to millennia).
However, they explain, given the current incompleteness of the NEO catalog, an unprecedented impact (such as the Chelyabinsk event) could occur at any time and with very little notice.