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PASADENA, California — Scientists say a newly discovered asteroid will whiz harmlessly past Earth on Wednesday, the second close encounter in a month.
The small space rock dubbed 2009 FH will fly within 49,000 miles of the Earth's surface at 8:17 a.m. EDT.
Don Yeomans, who heads NASA's Near-Earth Object Program, says there's no chance of an impact.
The asteroid, measuring 43 feet and 95 feet across, was spotted Monday night by the NASA-funded Catalina Sky Survey in Arizona.
Originally posted by HaTaX
The thing that worries me is that if one of these passing "rocks" is big enough, it could mess with our magnetic poles and tip off a pole shift. Doesn't have to hit the earth to cause big problems.......
Originally posted by HaTaX
The thing that worries me is that if one of these passing "rocks" is big enough, it could mess with our magnetic poles and tip off a pole shift. Doesn't have to hit the earth to cause big problems.......
Asteroid 2009 FH to Fly By Earth on March 18
Jet Propulsion Laboratory
March 17, 2008
PASADENA, Calif. - A small asteroid will fly past Earth early tomorrow morning (Wed., March 18). The asteroid, 2009 FH, is about 50 feet (15 meters) wide. Its closest approach to Earth will occur at 5:17 a.m. PDT (8:17 a.m. EDT, 12:17 UTC) at an altitude of about 49,000 miles (79,000 kilometers).
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"This asteroid flyby will be a good viewing opportunity for both professional and amateur astronomers," said Don Yeomans of the Near-Earth Object Office at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif. "The asteroid poses no risk of impact to Earth now or for the foreseeable future."
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NASA detects and tracks asteroids and comets passing close to Earth. The Near Earth Object Observation Program, commonly called "Spaceguard," plots the orbits of these objects to determine if any could be potentially hazardous to our planet.
Media contact: DC Agle/JPL 818-393-9011
Source : Jet Propulsion Laboratory
Originally posted by wmd_2008
Could you please explain HOW a big rock could mess up the magnetic pole !
The 'pole shift theory' is the hypothesis that the axis of rotation of a planet has not always been at its present-day locations or that the axis will not persist there; in other words, that its physical poles had been or will be shifted. The Pole shift hypothesis is almost always discussed in the context of Earth, but other solar system bodies may have experienced axial reorientation during their existences.
.....
Other theories which are not dependent upon polar ice masses include those involving:
* a high-velocity asteroid or comet which hits Earth at such an angle that the lithosphere moves independent of the mantle
* a high-velocity asteroid or comet which hits Earth at such an angle that the entire planet shifts axis.
* an unusually magnetic celestial object which passes close enough to Earth to temporarily reorient the magnetic field, which then “drags” the lithosphere about a new axis of rotation. Eventually, the sun's magnetic field again determines the Earth's, after the intruding celestial object “returns” to a location from which it cannot influence Earth.