• Safe from Asteroid 2024 YR4, but they will look for more

    From a425couple@21:1/5 to All on Mon Feb 24 14:04:51 2025
    XPost: alt.astronomy, alt.fan.heinlein, ca.politics

    from https://arstechnica.com/space/2025/02/asteroid-2024-yr4-may-be-a-dud-but-we-will-soon-find-many-more-threats/

    Asteroid 2024 YR4 is going to miss Earth, but the story doesn’t end there "The YR4 episode is just the beginning."

    Eric Berger – Feb 24, 2025 6:39 AM | 25

    NASA's Near-Earth Object (NEO) Surveyor is the first space telescope specifically designed to hunt asteroids and comets that may be potential hazards to Earth. Credit: NASA

    It was only a few days ago that a certain fear-mongering website named,
    ahem, Ars Technica published an article about the prospect of a killer
    asteroid striking the planet Earth in the year 2032.

    At the time, the odds of a small asteroid first discovered late last
    year—and designated 2024 YR4—hitting us were non-negligible. There was
    an estimated 3.2 percent chance that the large rock would impact the
    planet eight years from now.

    In the days since then, the odds have fallen dramatically. Based on the
    latest estimate from NASA, there is now just a 0.0039 percent chance.
    Put another way, the odds of impact are 1 in 26,000.

    Now you might be inclined to call the author of that news article a
    planetary hero, as the odds of an impact have dropped precipitously
    since publication of this dire warning. The correlation is clear and convincing. We're more modest than that here at Ars, although we
    wouldn't turn away some new subscribers.

    In reality, even as the near-Earth asteroid 2024 YR4 was moving away, ground-based telescopes were able to gather enough observations to get a
    better handle on its orbit. So we can safely take a deep breath and
    return to the more pressing existential problems posed by threats on
    this planet, rather than off-world.

    However, there is something that we should all take away from this
    experience.

    Astronomers will find a lot more of these
    City-killer asteroids the size of 2024 YR4 are fairly common in the
    inner Solar System. This asteroid was likely somewhere between 40 and
    100 meters across, which is large enough to cause regional destruction
    on the planet, but small enough to be difficult to find with most
    telescopes. However, we should expect to find more of them in the coming
    years.

    "An object the size of YR4 passes harmlessly through the Earth-Moon neighborhood as frequently as a few times per year," Richard Binzel, one
    of the world's leading asteroid experts and a professor of planetary
    sciences at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, told Ars. "The
    YR4 episode is just the beginning for astronomers gaining the capability
    to see these objects before they come calling through our neck of the
    woods."

    These new capabilities include powerful telescopes, some of which are
    expressly designed to find near-Earth hazards.

    The Vera C. Rubin Observatory, formerly known as the Large Synoptic
    Survey Telescope, is nearing completion in Chile. Among its primary
    scientific objectives is finding small asteroids near Earth, and it is
    likely to find many. A little more than two years from now, the NEO
    Surveyor is scheduled to launch to a Sun-Earth Lagrange point. This
    NASA-backed instrument will survey the Solar System for threats to
    Earth. Finally, the Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope due to launch in
    2027 will not look directly for asteroids, but also is likely to find
    threats to Earth.

    With all of these tools coming online, astronomers believe we are likely
    to find 10 or even 100 times more objects like 2024 YR4.

    "For perhaps many of these new discoveries, we will have initial
    uncertainties about their miss-distance from Earth," Binzel said. "But
    just like YR4, with a little time and patient tracking, we will be able
    to rule out entirely any hazard."

    Finding more asteroids is a good thing
    Binzel invented what is known as the "Torino Scale" about three decades
    ago to characterize the threat to humanity from asteroids and comets
    that are potentially on a collision course with Earth. The scale factors
    in both the probability of impact of an object as well as the kinetic
    energy that it could deliver to the planet.

    This scale ranks objects from 0, meaning no impact, to 10, which is (ok,
    this is a slight exaggeration) nearly as bad as the destruction of
    Alderaan in Star Wars.

    The highest ranking of an asteroid was 99942 Apophis, which briefly
    reached level 4 on the scale for a few days after its discovery in 2004. (Further analysis revealed that its orbit in 2036 will bring the
    asteroid near Earth, but not strike the planet.) As for 2024 YR4, it is
    notable because it reached a level 3 last week, when its odds of
    striking the planet were highest. But fear not, it's now a level 0.

    In fact, the message people should take from this whole experience is
    that the Solar System is full of small rocks whizzing all around. And
    when it comes to asteroids and comets, knowledge is power.

    "Rather than making anyone anxious, by finding these objects that are
    already out there and pinning down their orbits, we are becoming more
    secure in our knowledge that any sizable asteroid is not likely to take
    us by surprise as an unwelcome guest landing on us," Binzel said.

    And if there are legitimate threats, the more time we have to prepare a deflection mission to intercept the asteroid, the better.

    Photo of Eric Berger
    Eric Berger Senior Space Editor
    Eric Berger is the senior space editor at Ars Technica, covering
    everything from astronomy to private space to NASA policy, and author of
    two books: Liftoff, about the rise of SpaceX; and Reentry, on the
    development of the Falcon 9 rocket and Dragon. A certified
    meteorologist, Eric lives in Houston.
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