A tiny asteroid will slip by
Earth on Friday, March 2nd, coming within around 70,000 miles of our
planet as it cruises through the Solar System. The rock, which has been
named “2018 DV1,” is quite small, measuring just 23 feet in width, and
isn’t considered a danger to Earth. However, the same can’t be said for
the much larger asteroid that is right behind it.
On March 7th, the asteroid named “2017 VR12” will make its closest
approach to Earth, coming within around 870,000 miles. That’s a much
larger buffer zone, but the rock itself is also a great deal more
massive than 2018 DV1. 2017 VR12 is thought to measure over 500 feet
wide, and might even be as large as 1,500 feet wide based on the most
recent observations. That’s large enough to warrant a NASA label of
“potentially dangerous.”
According to NASA, both
asteroids should pass safely by our planet and aren’t expected to cause
much of a headache. That’s obviously good news, especially since the
smaller of the two, 2018 DV1, will actually be quite close when it makes
its pass. 70,000 miles is a mere hair’s width in cosmic terms, and is
well within the orbit of the Moon which orbits at around 240,000 miles.
2018 DV1 is a fairly recent
discovery. Asteroids of this size are very hard to spot until they get
much closer to Earth, while larger rocks like 2017 VR12 catch the eye of
astronomers from a much greater distance. Even if 2018 DV1 were to
strike the planet, it’s small enough that it would likely not do very
much damage, and certainly wouldn’t threaten the planet as a whole.
2017 VR12, on the other hand, has some potential to do serious harm
if it were to end up in a collision course with our planet. It’s
considered a medium sized rock, based on the size of asteroids that have
been logged in the past, and it’s not even in the same league as the
really big ones. Still, at as large as 1,500 feet wide, it’s not small.
Thankfully, it appears it will easily miss us this time around, and NASA
says it’s not expected to fly back into our neighborhood again for
another 177 years or so.
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