NASA/JPL-Caltech
Today is the day this monstrosity is whizzing past our planet. And even though there's no chance it will hit us, it will get relatively close.
"Beast" is only a little over 3 times the distance to the moon today at its closest point. That's just 777,000 miles.
And at its fastest, the asteroid is rocketing through space [2] at 31,000 mph. That was expected to be just before 2 am today.
The asteroid, officially named 2014 HQ124, is really big. Astronomers have revised it down to about 1,100 feet wide. That's a little more than the size of three football fields.
According to Space.com scientists think they've found about 95% of asteroids so big they could wipe us all out. But they also acknowledge that there are plenty more out there that could be dangerous if they get in our way.
[3]
Links
- ^ first found out (www.space.com)
- ^ rocketing through space (www.space.com)
- ^ Space.com ( www.space.com)
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