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Just a few hours before Super Bowl 2018 kickoff a "potentially hazardous" asteroid will hurl past Earth, providing an astronomical pre-game show. The asteroid will be closest to Earth at 4:30 p.m. EST on Super Bowl Sunday, traveling at a speed of 76,000 MPH, just a tad smidge than Tom Brady throws the football.
NASA has labeled this asteroid as "potentially hazardous" since it meets both criteria of wider than 500 meters and within 4.65 million miles of Earth. However, NASA has assured us that there is zero chance that the asteroid will collide with Earth hours before Super Bowl 2018.
NASA estimates that the asteroid is somewhere between 0.3 and 0.75 miles wide and was discovered over 18 years ago on January 15th, 2002. After tracking the asteroid for over a decade the federal agency confidently stated:
"Our calculations indicate that asteroid 2002 AJ129 has no chance - zero - of colliding with Earth on Feb. 4 or any time over the next 100 years."
originally posted by: Vector99
a reply to: Skywatcher2011
Good news is if it comes too close Brady will be there to throw a football at it and change the trajectory. I fully believe he could do that.
originally posted by: Monsieur Neary
a reply to: Skywatcher2011
If there is “zero chance” that the asteroid will collide with Earth, then why is it categorized as “potentially hazardous”? Any hazard potential should mean that there is a greater than zero chance, would it not?
originally posted by: Monsieur Neary
a reply to: Skywatcher2011
If there is “zero chance” that the asteroid will collide with Earth, then why is it categorized as “potentially hazardous”? Any hazard potential should mean that there is a greater than zero chance, would it not?
Potentially Hazardous Asteroids: NEAs whose Minimum Orbit Intersection Distance (MOID) with the Earth is 0.05 au or less and whose absolute magnitude (H) is 22.0 or brighter.
originally posted by: Monsieur Neary
a reply to: Skywatcher2011
If there is “zero chance” that the asteroid will collide with Earth, then why is it categorized as “potentially hazardous”?