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Asteroids Published 1 day ago 'Potentially hazardous' asteroid wider than two football fields set to fly past Earth next week


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'Potentially hazardous' asteroid wider than two football fields set to fly past Earth next week

An asteroid wider than two professional football fields is set to fly safely past Earth on Sept. 14, according to NASA's Center for Near-Earth Object Studies.

The space rock, known as asteroid 2020 QL2, is more than 120 meters (393 feet) in diameter, the government agency notes. It is expected to fly past Earth

at a speed of nearly 24,000 mph and come within a distance of 4.2 million miles.

By comparison, the moon is 238,900 miles from the Earth.

 

File photo: Artistic impression of two near-earth objects. (ESA / P. Carril)

 

File photo: Artistic impression of two near-earth objects. (ESA / P. Carril)

 

ASTEROID TO FLY PAST EARTH JUST BEFORE ELECTION DAY, NASA SAYS

 

Asteroid 2020 QL2 is considered "potentially hazardous" by NASA, given its size and close proximity to Earth, although it has almost no chance of hitting

 

the planet next week.

 

"Potentially hazardous" NEOs are defined as space objects that come within 0.05 astronomical units (4.6 million miles) and measure more than 460 feet

 

in diameter, according to NASA. According to a 2018 report put together by Planetary.org, there are more than 18,000 NEOs.

 

In August, a basketball court-sized asteroid flew "at least" 45,000 miles away from Earth, according to NASA's Asteroid Watch.

 

Separately in August, an asteroid the size of a pickup truck flew within 2,000 miles of Earth, the closest ever recorded. It was missed by NASA until after

 

it flew past the planet.

 

MILE-LONG ASTEROID COULD BE DANGEROUS TO LIFE ON EARTH IN MILLIONS OF YEARS IF IT BREAKS UP: SCIENTISTS

 

NASA unveiled a 20-page plan in 2018 that details the steps the U.S. should take to be better prepared for NEOs, such as asteroids and comets that

 

come within 30 million miles of the planet.

 

recent survey showed that Americans prefer a space program that focuses on potential asteroid impacts over sending humans back to the moon or

 

to Mars.

 

NASA Administrator Jim Bridenstine said in April 2019 that an asteroid strike is not something to be taken lightly and is perhaps Earth's biggest threat.

 

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