Scientist gives chilling update on asteroid heading towards us
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Being wiped out by a massive space rock that hits Earth at thousands of miles an hour may sound like a plot worthy of a Hollywood film. 

But a newly-discovered space rock, called 2024 YR4, really is on a collision course with Earth. 

Discovered towards the end of last year, 2024 YR4 measures somewhere between 130 to 300 feet (40 to 90 meters) in diameter, making it likely larger than the Statue of Liberty.

Last week, scientists upgraded the risk that 2024 YR4 will hit Earth to 1-in-43 (2.3 per cent), with an impact date of December 22, 2032. 

Now, in a chilling update on X, a scientist says ‘we might not be able to stop 2024 YR4’ from hitting Earth, even with a deflection mission. 

Dr Robin George Andrews, a volcanologist and author based in London, points out that we ‘have less than eight years to potentially deal with it’. 

‘You need 10 years or more to build, plan and execute an asteroid deflection mission,’ he said.

‘We don’t have much time.’  

Scientists currently predict that the 90-metre-wide (300 feet) asteroid 2024 YR4 has a one in 43 chance of hitting Earth in 2032. If it does it would cause widespread damage to a populated area

Scientists currently estimate that the asteroid 2024 YR4, with a width of 90 meters (300 feet), has a one in 43 chance of colliding with Earth in 2032. Such an impact would lead to extensive damage in a populated area.

Dr Robin George Andrews, a volcanologist and author based in London, says 'we might not be able to stop 2024 YR4'

Dr Robin George Andrews, a volcanologist and author based in London, says ‘we might not be able to stop 2024 YR4’

NASA’s remarkable Double Asteroid Redirection Test (DART) mission, unveiled as one of its significant achievements, showcased the concept of diverting a space rock from a collision course with Earth by deliberately crashing a spacecraft into it.

The DART spacecraft launched from California in November 2021 and completed its 10-month journey when it hit the asteroid Dimorphos on September 26, 2022.

Dimorphos, around 560 feet in diameter, orbits a larger asteroid called Didymos, both of which are around 6.8 million miles away from our planet. 

The collision shortened Dimorphos’ orbit by more than half an hour – making it an even greater success than NASA had anticipated. 

However, neither Dimorphos nor its Didymos posed any danger to Earth; instead, DART was rehearsal of what may be required if a space rock does one day threaten our planet. 

Although he acknowledged DART ‘worked wonders’, Dr Andrews said we ‘might not be able to stop 2024 YR4’ in a similar way. 

‘It doesn’t mean we can use kinetic impactors like it to deflect any asteroid whenever we want,’ he said. 

‘So much could go wrong if we try and hit it with something like DART.’ 

On average, Earth is hit by a football pitch-sized rock every 5,000 years, and a civilisation-ending asteroid every one million years, according to NASA's Near-Earth Object Program

On average, Earth is hit by a football pitch-sized rock every 5,000 years, and a civilisation-ending asteroid every one million years, according to NASA’s Near-Earth Object Program

Already, NASA has reached a hugely-important milestone with the DART asteroid deflection mission. In September 2022, the DART spacecraft was intentionally crashed into Dimorphos, an asteroid 6.8 million miles away

Already, NASA has reached a hugely-important milestone with the DART asteroid deflection mission. In September 2022, the DART spacecraft was intentionally crashed into Dimorphos, an asteroid 6.8 million miles away

The Dimorphos space rock is pictured here as seen by the DART spacecraft 11 seconds before impact

The Dimorphos space rock is pictured here as seen by the DART spacecraft 11 seconds before impact 

What is 2024 YR4? 

2024 YR4 is a ‘city killer’ asteroid determined to have a low chance of impacting Earth on December 2, 2032. 

It was first spotted in late December last year by astronomers at the NASA-funded Asteroid Terrestrial-impact Last Alert System station in Chile. 

Since then, this rock has become a growing matter of concern as the probability of an impact rises. 

When first spotted, NASA assigned the asteroid an impact probability of 1.2 per cent that it would hit Earth, but that has since increased to 2.3 per cent. 

Most asteroids are not solid rock but ‘rubble piles’ – clusters of loose boulders, stones and sand held together by the weak mutual gravity of space. 

At the moment, we don’t know the exact size of 2024 YR4, or even if it’s a rubble pile asteroid too – but hitting rubble pile asteroids with a spacecraft like DART could potentially generate a cloud of debris that could head towards Earth anyway.

‘Nobody wants to accidentally “disrupt” an asteroid, because those components can still head for Earth,’ Dr Andrews said. 

There’s also the chance that a mammoth space effort akin to DART wouldn’t even sufficiently alter the asteroid’s path.  

‘With only a few years down the line, we could accidentally deflect it – but not enough to make it avoid the planet,’ the expert added. 

‘Then, it still hits Earth, just somewhere else that wasn’t going to be hit.’ 

He added: ‘I’m not saying a kinetic impactor mission, or missions, couldn’t work.

‘But we don’t have much time, and we don’t have enough info about this rapidly fading asteroid to properly inform our planetary defense decisions yet.’

Asteroid 2024 YR4 is about the same size as the Tunguska asteroid, which caused the largest impact event in recorded history when it shot through Earth's atmosphere in 1908, flattening 830 square miles (2,150 square km) of forest (pictured)

Asteroid 2024 YR4 is about the same size as the Tunguska asteroid, which caused the largest impact event in recorded history when it shot through Earth’s atmosphere in 1908, flattening 830 square miles (2,150 square km) of forest (pictured)

It’s worth remembering that 2024 YR4 has a 1-in-43 (2.3 per cent) chance of impacting Earth on December 2032. 

Dr Andrews stressed ‘the odds of an impact remain low’, likening the situation to having 43 buttons in front of you and being asked to press one of them. 

‘I don’t think you should be concerned,’ he said in an accompanying blog post

‘When more observations come in, it’s probable that the impact odds will plummet to a zero as the orbit of the asteroid is more precisely defined.’ 

If its point of impact is in the middle of a desert, or in the ocean, it will ‘harm nobody’, but if it hits a town or city, it will ‘destroy much of it’. 

On average, Earth is hit by a football pitch-sized rock every 5,000 years, and a civilisation-ending asteroid every one million years, according to NASA’s Near-Earth Object Program. 

Last year, a NASA report found we’re poorly-prepared for an asteroid collision, even if we detected the object 14 years in advance. 

Asteroid 2024 YR4 is thought to be at least the same size as the Tunguska asteroid – which had an estimated diameter of 130 feet, according to NASA. 

Tunguska caused the largest impact event in recorded history when it shot through Earth’s atmosphere in 1908, flattening 830 square miles (2,150 square km) of forest. 

Many lost consciousness and at least three people passed away as a direct consequence of the Tunguska event, according to a 2019 study

POTENTIAL METHODS FOR ELIMINATING THE THREAT OF AN ASTEROID  

DART is one of many concepts of how to negate the threat of an asteroid that have been suggested over the years. 

Multiple bumps 

Scientists in California have been firing projectiles at meteorites to simulate the best methods of altering the course of an asteroid so that it wouldn’t hit Earth. 

According to the results so far, an asteroid like Bennu that is rich in carbon could need several small bumps to charge its course.

‘These results indicate multiple successive impacts may be required to deflect rather than disrupt asteroids, particularly carbonaceous asteroids,’ researchers said.  

Nuke 

Another idea, known simply as ‘nuke’, involves blowing up a nuclear explosive close to the asteroid.

However, this could create smaller but still potentially dangerous fragments of rock that could spin off in all directions, potentially towards Earth. 

Ion Beam Deflection

With Ion Beam Deflection, plumes from a space probe’s thrusters would be directed towards the asteroid to gently push on its surface over a wide area. 

A thruster firing in the opposite direction would be needed to keep the spacecraft at a constant distance from the asteroid. 

Gravity tractor 

And yet another concept, gravity tractor, would deflect the asteroid without physically contacting it, but instead by using only its gravitational field to transmit a required impulse. 

Professor Colin Snodgrass, an astronomer at the University of Edinburgh said: ‘There have been a few concepts suggested, such as a ‘gravity tractor’ to slowly tow an asteroid away instead of pushing it with a kinetic impactor.

‘But the kinetic impactor is definitely the simplest technology to use on the sort of timescale that is most likely to be of concern for this size of asteroid, i.e. years to decades warning time.’

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