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Large asteroid to pass between Earth and the moon on Saturday

- Nicole Mortillaro

Earth is surrounded by rocky bodies and bits of de‐ bris from when the solar system formed roughly 4.5 billion years ago. On Satur‐ day, one of those leftover rocks will whiz past Earth.

The asteroid is called 2024 MK and, at its closest, it will pass roughly 290,000 km from Earth. While we have plenty of small asteroids that are scattered within Earth's orbit, this one is sizeable, ranging anywhere from 120 metres to 260 metres in di‐ ameter.

But there's another inter‐ esting - and somewhat dis‐ quieting - fact about this large asteroid.

"Maybe the big take-home point on this one is it's a pret‐ ty big object and it was only found 10 or 12 days before closest approach," said Peter Brown, Canada Research Chair in meteor astronomy and a professor at Western University in London, Ont. "The last time we had an ob‐ ject this big or bigger pass this close to Earth was ... in 2001."

"So unlike most asteroid stories, this actually is note‐ worthy in the sense of … this is pretty big, pretty close."

According to Alan Fitzsim‐ mons, a planetary scientist at Queen's University Belfast in Northern Ireland, at its clos‐ est, 2024 MK will be visible from the southern hemi‐ sphere. The following night it will be in the constellat­ion Scorpius, which is low in the south in Canada.

However, don't expect to see it. It won't be visible to the unaided eye, and, Fitzsimmon­s added to those who may have telescopes, "you've got to have to know exactly where to look. It's motoring."

Fortunatel­y, it won't im‐ pact Earth. But it would be a bad day if it did.

"This is a big object. An object of this size is going to have the equivalent impact energy in the hundreds of megaton approachin­g a giga‐ ton," Brown said. "That'd be a regional impact. It's the sort of thing that if it hit the east coast of the U.S., you would have catastroph­ic effects over most of the eastern seaboard. But it's not big enough to affect the whole world."

Bigger, closer asteroids The appearance of 2024 MK is timely. It's passing by just nine days after NASA re‐ leased a report on the results of an asteroid-threat simula‐ tion conducted in early April. And it's making an appear‐ ance just one day ahead of Asteroid Day which is held annually on June 30.

Asteroid Day, sanctioned by the United Nations, was started in 2014 by astro‐ physicist and former Queen musician Brian May along with Apollo 9 astronaut Rusty Schweickar­t along with a few others. The goal is to inform the public about asteroids and their potential threats as well as calling on governmen‐ ts to work on asteroid detec‐ tion programs.

The threat of asteroids or comets impacting Earth is a very real concern, though there are multiple sky sur‐ veys looking for potentiall­y hazardous asteroids (PHA). In fact, one of them - the Aster‐ oid Terrestria­l-impact Last Alert System (ATLAS) - discov‐ ered 2024 MK last week.

Both Brown and Fitzsim‐ mons say that at any one time there is a 10-metre as‐ teroid somewhere between Earth and the moon. Essen‐ tially, Earth is plowing through debris all the time. Meteors burn up in our at‐ mosphere all the time, it's just that most of them are small and go unnoticed. Brown said that even bigger impacts may go unnoticed as they may impact over the ocean.

But in 1994, the astro‐ nomical world was shocked to see the effects of several pieces of a comet slamming into Jupiter, the largest planet in our solar system.

Then in 2013, the re‐ minder that we're in a cosmic shooting gallery hit home. On February 15, a 20-metre wide rock impacted over en‐ tered Earth's atmosphere over Chelyabins­k, Russia, causing a massive air burst that blew out windows in the area, injuring roughly 1,000 people.

Fitzsimmon­s said that As‐ teroid Day is a reminder that we're not just sitting ducks.

"It's the only natural disas‐ ter that we can stop. You can't stop a tsunami, you can't stop an earthquake, you can't stop a volcano," he said. "You can actually stop or prevent an asteroid im‐ pact, in least in theory."

And NASA put that to the test in 2021 with its Double Asteroid Redirectio­n Test (DART) mission where it used a spacecraft to redirect an as‐ teroid. It was hailed as a suc‐ cess, and a follow-up mission by the European Space Agen‐ cy's Hera mission to further quantify the results will launch in October.

NASA's OSIRIS-REx mis‐ sion, which visited the aster‐ oid Bennu and returned a sample to Earth in 2023, has been given a new mission called OSIRIS-APEX. The spacecraft will visit the in‐ famous asteroid Apophis.

At one point, it was be‐ lieved the 320-metre-wide as‐ teroid had a risk of impacting Earth in 2068, however, that has now been ruled out. But it will swing extremely close to Earth in 2029 - so close that it will be within the re‐ gion of our geostation­ary satellites, at roughly 30,000 kilometres from Earth.

WATCH | Animation of Asteroid Apophis' 2029 Close Approach with Earth and satellites:

"So [2024] MK is sort of the leader in the next four or five years to a couple of real‐ ly big events," Brown said. "Of course, the one every‐ body knows about is Apophis in April 2029. That's a oncein-millennia event. Nothing in historic times has been that close, that big to us. But there's also an asteroid called 2001 WN5, and it's actually going to pass closer than 2024 MK. And it's a monster. It's a kilometre in size."

Thankfully, NASA and oth‐ er space agencies are work‐ ing hard to find all the PHAs. To date it's believed that most objects one kilometre and larger have been found.

As for 2024 MK, Fitzsim‐ mons said that this is an op‐ portunity for astronomer­s to study it, even if it is only a brief pass. A team at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory has plans to map it using Earthbased radar telescopes.

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