A huge asteroid will safely pass by Earth on Wednesday

The gigantic asteroid 1998 OR2 will pass by within 6.3 million kilometers of our planet on April 29

A NASA artist's concept of a broken-up asteroid. PHOTO: REUTERS

A mile-long asteroid will make a close approach to Earth on April 29, revealed NASA.

However, there is no reason to worry because the asteroid will not even come close to striking Earth.



The Arecibo Observatory in Puerto Rico captured this radar image of the big asteroid 1998 OR2 on April 17, 2020. The asteroid will fly by Earth at a distance of 3.9 million miles (6.3 million kilometers) on April 29. PHOTO: Arecibo Observatory


NASA keeps a close watch on near-Earth objects even if impact is unlikely. The 1998 OR2 asteroid will be about 16 times farther from us than the moon is from the Earth.

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"There are no asteroids which have any significant chance of hitting the Earth that is of any significant size," said Paul Chodas, manager of NASA's Center for Near-Earth Object Studies at the agency's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, California, said during a pre-recorded "NASA Science Live" webcast on April 27.


"There are none on our list."

NASA scientists think they have discovered and tracked more than 90% of the near-Earth asteroids (NEAs) that are least 1 km wide, large enough to pose a global threat to humans.

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There are plenty of NEAs out there, so some big dangerous ones may still lurk out there undetected, said both Chodas and Lindley Johnson, NASA's Planetary Defense Officer and program executive of the Planetary Defense Coordination Office.

"Impact of the Earth by an asteroid large enough to do damage at the surface is an extremely rare event, but it's an inevitable event," Johnson said during today's webcast.

Asteroids tend to get pushed away by the gravitational pulls of other objects which makes it difficult to sustain their orbits over a long period of time.

Hence when given enough time these asteroids will eventually send a big space rock screaming toward Earth.
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