您现在的位置是:時尚 >>正文
【】
時尚21574人已围观
简介It's extremely unlikely that a colossal space rock will slam into Earth in the coming centuries, and ...
It's extremely unlikely that a colossal space rock will slam into Earth in the coming centuries, and beyond.
NASA, however, is vigilantly watching the skies for any near-Earth objects that might threaten our planet, whether on a small, regional, or planetary scale. Asteroids, often small, regularly whizz by Earth — which in space terms still means a few million miles away. On May 27, the space agency lists a "close approach" for a 1.1-mile-wide asteroid labeled "7335 (1989 JA)." It will pass us at a distance of about 2.5 million miles.
It's not a threat to Earth. If it were, NASA would issue an official warning to the White House and other government agencies — which is something the space agency has never needed to do.
Yet through telescopes, the sizable asteroid is already quite visible in the night sky. The Virtual Telescope Project — an educational and research astronomy endeavor that often shares images of passing objects — just captured an image of (7335) 1989 JA as it traveled closer to Earth. "The potentially hazardous asteroid (7335) 1989 JA is almost at its safe, minimum distance from us, being now very bright," Italian astronomer Gianluca Masi, who heads the project, wrote online. (Near-Earth objects are those that pass about 30 million miles from Earth's orbit; a "potentially hazardous object" gets within five million miles.)
Like most objects big or bright enough to be visible from millions of miles away, (7335) 1989 JA appears as a bright dot against the background of stars. In the image below from May 23, the rock is some 3.6 million miles away. (The Virtual Telescope Project captured a closer image of the asteroid on May 25, from some 2.8 million miles away, but at such a distance it looks similar.)
The near-Earth asteroid (7335) 1989 JA.Credit: The Virtual Telescope Project
A graphic of asteroid (7335) 1989 JA (on the red line trajectory) passing Earth and the moon.Credit: NASA / Center for Near Earth Object StudiesRead more about space rocks and asteroids at Mashable:
How scientists find the big asteroids that can threaten Earth
If a scary asteroid will actually strike Earth, here's how you'll know
The mega-comet hurtling through our solar system is 85, yes 85, miles wide
Weather permitting, The Virtual Telescope Project will also livestream the passing asteroid on May 26 and 27.
NASA is currently on the hunt for asteroids that are considerably smaller than a mile-wide behemoth, but can still pose a major threat to populated areas. Congress has directed NASA to find 90 percent of the near-Earth objects 460 feet (140 meters) wide or larger, though even a rock some 100 to 170 feet across can devastate a place like Kansas City. That's why NASA-funded telescopes are continuously looking for potentially-threatening rocks of all sizes.
If astronomers find them, then we can prepare and move out of the way if an impact becomes imminent. "You need to know what's coming, when it's coming, and how hard it's going to hit," Eric Christensen, the director of the NEO-seeking Catalina Sky Survey in Arizona, recently told Mashable.
And if humanity has years of notice, one day we just might be able to nudge a future asteroid away from our planet.
TopicsNASA
Tags:
转载:欢迎各位朋友分享到网络,但转载请说明文章出处“夫榮妻貴網”。http://www.new.maomao321.com/news/84f59899317.html
相关文章
The five guys who climbed Australia's highest mountain, in swimwear
時尚Climbing a freezing cold mountain is already hard enough work. But in briefs? Nope.。It's too late fo ...
【時尚】
阅读更多Apple may release a cheaper MacBook Air this year
時尚So, you love Apple products but you also love still having money in your bank account — what's ...
【時尚】
阅读更多Everything you need to understand the Uber
時尚For the next three weeks the autonomous vehicle industry will be in overdrive. Waymo and Uber, the t ...
【時尚】
阅读更多
热门文章
- Hiddleswift finally followed each other on Instagram after 3 excruciating days
- Trump shows gun control hypocrisy in wake of latest school shooting
- Here's what it's like to fly in Qatar Airways' new luxury Qsuite
- This phone company is turning heads by being more ambitious than Apple
- Tourist survives for month in frozen New Zealand wilderness after partner dies
- Chris Hemsworth is your everyday dad, teaching his kids how to surf
最新文章
Singapore gets world's first driverless taxis
Quincy Jones got real about Ivanka Trump, U2, and so much more
Everything you need to understand the Uber
Joe Biden signed a Joe Biden meme because he's Joe freakin' Biden
Katy Perry talks 'Rise,' her next batch of songs, and how to survive Twitter
Patagonia's new activism platform finds you convenient ways to save the planet