TOPSHOT - JAXA's Hayabusa-2 probe's sample drop to earth after landing on and gathering material from an asteroid some 300 million kilometres from Earth is seen from Coober Pedy in South Australia on December 6, 2020. - Call it a special delivery: after six years in space, Japan's Hayabusa-2 probe is heading home, but only to drop off its rare asteroid samples before starting a new mission.

As per NASA, a possibly dangerous space rock the equivalent to the size of a blue whale will pass Earth on the 12th of August - Friday.

Asteroid with the Size of a Blue Whale


The space rock, 2015 FF, has a projected circumference of 42 to 92 feet, or roughly the normal size of a mature blue whale, and therefore will pass Planet at a speed of 20,512 miles per hour, the Space reported.

At its neighboring points, the object would pass beyond roughly 2.67 million miles of Earth, which is slightly more than eight-fold the usual range among Earth and the moon. This is a minuscule gap by astronomical measures.

Whatever spatial component that emerges inside 120 million miles of Earth is classified as a near-Earth object, as well as some speedily entity that arrives inside 4.65 million miles of Earth is classified as highly unsafe.

Once the particles are classified, astrophysicists keep monitoring them for whatever discrepancy from their anticipated movements - like an unforeseen wobble off a further space rock - which might hold them on a catastrophic war footing with Earth.

NASA is aware of the position and trajectory of around 28,000 meteorites, which it tracks using the Asteroid Terrestrial-impact Last Alert System (ATLAS) - a network of four observatories competent of scanning the whole evening sky as often as every 24 hours.

From its very inception in 2017, ATLAS has discovered over 700 near-Earth objects and 66 celestial bodies.

ATLAS spotted two asteroids, 2019 MO and 2018 LA, which both collided with Earth, the aforementioned blowing up off the southern coast of Puerto Rico and the second docking close to the boundary of Botswana and South Africa. Luckily, the space rocks were minor and caused little harm.

In their official statement, NASA claimed that the paths of all objects at different distances further than the conclusion of the century have been predicted, and the added bonus is that Earth confronts zero clear threat from a cataclysmic space debris impact for a minimum of 100 years, as per Headtopics.

However, this does not suggest that aerospace enthusiasts must abandon their search. Albeit the bulk of near-Earth objects does hardly pose a threat to humanity, such as the apocalyptic celestial body depicted in the 2021 comedic catastrophe film "Don't Look Up," there have been enough deadly asteroid strikes in modern years to urge continuous monitoring.

Also read: Monsoon in the Southwest and a Cold Front in the Southeast Forecasted from August 12 

Asteroid Coming on Friday

According to Flipboard, a bowled ball-sized asteroid detonated above Vermont in March 2021 with the power of 440 pounds of TNT. Those pyrotechnics, meanwhile, pale in comparison against the latest spectacular meteorite outburst, which happened in 2013 in the central Russian metropolis of Chelyabinsk.

When the Chelyabinsk meteorite hit the sky, it produced a burst equivalent to 400 to 500 kilotons of TNT, or 26 to 33-fold the force produced by the Hiroshima bombing.

Lightning bolts showered onto the metropolis and its surroundings, destroying businesses, breaking glass panels, and wounding over 1,200 civilians. If scientists eventually spot an extraterrestrial heading directly for Earth, aerospace organizations all over the globe are now brainstorming measures to divert the rock.

NASA dispatched a vehicle in behalf of its Double Asteroid Redirection Test (DART) program on November 24, 2021, with the goal of redirecting the non-hazardous space debris Dimorphos by smashing it off track in fall 2022, as initially disclosed by Live Science.

China is likewise in the preliminary phases of developing an asteroid-redirect expedition. The government seeks to avoid a possibly disastrous collision with Earth by launching 23 Long March 5 launchers towards the asteroid Bennu.

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