Posted on 12/06/2019 5:36:18 PM PST by BenLurkin
The space rock will fly harmlessly past our planet. Asteroid VH5 2019 will make its flyby at about 17.9 lunar distances on Dec. 8, according to the Center for Near-Earth Object Studies at NASAs Jet Propulsion Laboratory. The asteroid has dimensions of 57 meters (187 feet) by 130 meters (426.5 feet), NASA says.
Citing the asteroids dimensions, the Inquisitr website describes the rock as pyramid-shaped, noting that it is almost as large as the famous Great Pyramid of Giza. The Apollo asteroid is one of five space rocks set to fly by Earth over the weekend, according to the Inquisitr, all at safe distances.
A massive 2,000-foot asteroid harmlessly zoomed past Earth last month. In 2017, a skyscraper-sized asteroid named 2010 NY65 flew past Earth at about eight times the distance between Earth and the moon.
(Excerpt) Read more at foxnews.com ...
LOL
On impact, a rock that tiny would destroy any city on Earth.
Except that much of it would burn up on entry making the resulting rock far smaller and unlikely to hit a city - open ocean water more likely that some city - most rocks never make it to the surface, only worry if if is one mile or more in size.
Don't be absurd. Anything rock bigger than about a city bus will not burn up entirely. A 400 foot object would be through the entire atmosphere in something like 3 seconds with over 99% of its mass.
It depends on the angle and speed of the entry as well as the composition of the rock whether it burns up or not. And rocks that small are not listed as threats - again the likelihood of hitting a city are vanishingly small - Chelyabinsk got lucky.
The fact remains that our atmosphere only affords some protection from very small rocks. Angle won't make any difference in the future, just as it has never made any difference in the past -- the big ones won't burn up, and the big ones aren't all that big, but they pack as much as or more (or much more) destructive power than nuclear weapons. A rock less than a mile across delivers more energy than the simultaneous detonation of all the world's nukes.
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