Asteroid Day: Remembering how close they got to obliterating Earth

This undated handout two-picture combo of artist conceptions provided by NASA/JPL Caltech shows what NASA says are good candidates for a mission to capture an asteroid, haul it to the moon for astronauts to visit. One prime candidate swung close by Earth in 2011 so astronomers know its size, about 20 feet, mass and density, but they don’t really know what it looks like. These images are two different artist conceptions of what the lightweight asteroid could look like, either a pile of small rocks flying together in formation, left, or a larger porous rock with pebbles surrounding it, right. (AP Photo/NASA/JPL Caltech)

MANILA, Philippines—For many astronomy enthusiasts, June 30 is no ordinary day.

For millions of people across the globe, the last day of June marks the celebration of Asteroid Day—an international event recognized by United Nations to raise public awareness on asteroid hits on Earth.

The celebration of Asteroid Day offers a chance to learn more about asteroids and the history of the occasion.

Asteroid 101

What are asteroids?

According to the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA), asteroids are small rocky objects that float in space and orbits the Sun.

Asteroids are also known as minor planets due to their size, which is smaller than actual planets in the solar system. Asteroids are usually irregularly shaped or nearly spherical and are sometimes filled with craters.

NASA also described it as the “airless remnants left over from the early formation of our solar system about 4.6 billion years ago.”

DEPICTION OF AN ASTEROID PASSING BY EARTH

Vesta, the biggest asteroid and the second most largest object in the asteroid belt, was 530 kilometers in diameter. Some asteroids, on the other hand, can be 10 meters long.

“More than 150 asteroids are known to have a small companion moon (some have two moons). There are also binary (double) asteroids, in which two rocky bodies of roughly equal size orbit each other, as well as triple asteroid systems,” NASA said on its website.

What is the difference between asteroids and meteors?

Asteroids, while smaller than planets, are larger than the “pebble-sized” objects in space called the meteoroids.

As explained by NASA, when two asteroids smash into each other, small pieces break off. These are called meteoroids.

“If a meteoroid comes close enough to Earth and enters Earth’s atmosphere, it vaporizes and turns into a meteor: a streak of light in the sky,” said NASA.

The streaks of light are often called shooting stars, even though meteors are not actually stars.

DIFFERENT METEOR TERMINOLOGIES USED BY ASTRONOMERS. ILLUSTRATION FROM AMERICAN METEOR SOCIETY

What are the asteroid classifications?

Asteroids have three different classifications depending on where they are located.

SOME ASTEROIDS ARE FILLED WITH CRATERS WHICH ARE EVIDENCE OF COLLISION WITH OTHER SPACE OBJECTS

What are the most-known asteroids ever discovered?

Among the millions of asteroids in space, there are some that stand out for a reason. These include:

Destructive impacts

Near-Earth objects (NEOs), like asteroids and comets, that are greater than 140 meters in diameter and “whose orbit brings it within 4.7 million miles (7.5 million km) of Earth’s orbit” are flagged by NASA as potentially hazardous objects (PHOs).

“Although the vast majority of NEOs that enter Earth’s atmosphere disintegrate before reaching the surface (and more than 100 tons of dust particles disintegrate in Earth’s atmosphere daily), those NEOs that are larger than around 98 to 164 feet (30 to 50 meters) in size and could cause widespread damage in and around their impact sites,” NASA explained on its website.

Considered by the agency as a “cosmic wake-up call,” the Chelyabinsk event in 2013 was an example of how disastrous an asteroid impact could be.

In the morning of Feb. 15, 2013, residents of Chelyabinsk in Russia were awakened by what was described as “a blinding flash [and] loud sonic boom” as well as the shattering of glass in many households and facilities.

It all happened after an undetected asteroid as big as a house entered the Earth’s atmosphere and blew up 14 miles above the ground.

“The explosion released the energy equivalent of around 440,000 tons of TNT and generated a shock wave that blew out windows over 200 square miles and damaged some buildings,” NASA reported.

Aside from damages to infrastructure, over a thousand people in the city were injured in the blast, which according to reports, was mostly because of broken glass.

Years after the event, another asteroid exploded on Dec. 18, 2018 – this time over the Bering Sea.

A report by NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) said the blast that occurred about 26 kilometers above the sea unleashed around 173 kilotons of energy—considered as 10 times more powerful than the force of the atomic bomb dropped on Hiroshima during World War II.

‘Whizzing’ past the Earth

In 2004, asteroid 99942 Apophis was predicted to hit the Earth by 2068 and was thought of as the “most hazardous asteroid that could impact Earth.”

However, last March, astronomers announced that the Earth was finally safe and far from the potentially catastrophic asteroid impact.

READ: Earth is safe from ‘hazardous’ asteroid thought to hit in 2068 — NASA

Still, data from NASA’s Center for Near Earth Object Studies (CNEOS) revealed that over a thousand asteroids have passed near Earth over the past years.

Analysis by data consumer Statista said there were a total of 26,115 Near Earth Asteroids (NEAs) and around 2,185 potentially dangerous asteroids detected as of June this year.

READ: Thousands of Asteroids Whizz Past Earth

GRAPHIC FROM STATISTA

The figures, according to the report by Statista’s Katharina Buchholz, were significantly greater than earlier data collected by NASA.

“As technology has advanced throughout the decades, people have become better at seeing what is floating around us in the sky,” said Buchholz.

“According to Nasa’s CNEOS Center, only a handful of celestial objects had been detected by 1900. The scale of that number did not change much until the end of the century. As of 1990, only 134 Near Earth Asteroids and 42 potentially dangerous objects were detected up above,” she said.

Story behind the annual celebration

In 2016, the UN and the Association of Space Explorers (ASE) declared that International Asteroid Day should be observed annually on the 30th of June as a commemoration of the Tunguska event when an asteroid slammed into Earth near the Podkamennaya Tunguska River in Russia in the morning of June 30, 1908.

The blast was so strong that the shock wave was felt 40 miles from ground zero.

“A century later some still debate the cause and come up with different scenarios that could have caused the explosion,” Don Yeomans, former manager of the NEO Office at NASA JPL, said in a 2008 article

“But the generally agreed upon theory is that on the morning of June 30, 1908, a large space rock, about 120 feet across, entered the atmosphere of Siberia and then detonated in the sky,” he explained.

Aside from raising public awareness on the potential hazard of asteroid impacts, the UN also urged member states to pay more attention to such events.

“It is essential that states pay more attention to the problem of collisions of space objects, especially those with nuclear power sources, with space debris, and other aspects of space debris,” a UN resolution read.

It said there’s a need to continue research on asteroids to develop technology to monitor space debris, compile and disseminate data on these.

Filipino namesakes

There are currently 13 asteroids named after Filipinos orbiting in space.

TABLE FROM DOST

According to the Philippine Atmospheric, Geophysical and Astronomical Services Administration (Pagasa), among these were:

In 2019, three more Filipino high school students who won major awards during the 2018 Intel International Science and Engineering Fair (ISEF) were set to have three minor planets named after them.

READ: 3 minor planets named after 3 Filipino students who won in 2018 ISEF

TSB

RELATED STORY:

It’s out of this world—AI confirms existence of fifty new planets

Read more...