There is an asteroid called 2011 AG5, and if it follows the orbit scientists have plotted for it so far, there is a small, small chance that it could hit Earth in February 2040.
Don't quit your job and sell your house just yet. Astronomers, who have
been tracking the asteroid since January 2011, say it is in an
elliptical orbit that could bring it somewhere near Earth in 2040. Earth
is about 8,000 miles in diameter; the asteroid appears to be about 450
feet across.
The problem is that having watched it for only about half an orbit
around the Sun, the scientists cannot say for certain where it will be
28 years from now. So, for the moment, NASA's Near Earth Object Program
says the odds are about one in 625 that it could hit us in that
still-distant future.
"We have a good opportunity to observe it next year and again in 2016,"
said Donald Yoemans, who heads the program at NASA's Jet Propulsion
Laboratory. "We fully expect that the odds will go way down, most likely
to zero, by then."
In the meantime, it was a subject of discussion at a meeting in Vienna
of the Scientific and Technical Subcommittee of the United Nations
Committee on the Peaceful Uses of Outer Space.
The committee members agreed that 2011 AG5 bears watching, and could be
useful as the subject of a "tabletop exercise" in what to do if, anytime
soon, there really is an asteroid with our name on it.
"In our Action Team 14 discussions, we thus concluded that it not
necessarily can be called a 'real' threat. To do that, ideally, we
should have at least one, if not two, full orbits observed," said Detlef
Koschny of the European Space Agency in an interview with Space.com
Scientists have discussed all sorts of far-out plans in case a future
asteroid truly does turn out to be coming our way. If they have enough
lead time, they might send a probe with thruster rockets, or even
explosives, to nudge an asteroid into a slightly different orbit. A
very small course change, years in advance, could make a big difference
by 2040, they say. Even if the asteroid misses Earth by less than a
hundred miles, its passing will be a non-event.
There are asteroids wandering around the inner solar system all the time -- one of them, called 2005 YU55, passed within 201,000 miles of Earth in November, closer than the moon is to us.
But about half a dozen times since the planet formed, there have been
major for-real impacts with catastrophic results. The last, 65 million
years ago, is believed to have killed off the last of the dinosaurs with
the dust and ash that darkened the skies after it hit, though there
have been scientists who disagree.
Scientists estimate that the asteroid from back then was about nine
miles across at its widest, far larger than 2011 AG5. And they point
out that they know very little about 2011 AG5; they cannot say whether
it is a solid hunk of rock or a loose jumble of debris flying together
in space. All they know is that it's in a long, elliptical orbit that
takes it almost twice as far from the sun as we are.
"The bottom line is: We have time," Yoemans said. "The sober approach is to make more observations, to wait and see."
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