Daily Times (Primos, PA)

Scientists look to make most of asteroid near miss

- By Corinne Purtill

To be clear: The asteroid is not going to hit us.

There was a while there when it seemed like it could. Suffice to say those were heady days in the asteroid tracking community.

But, NASA has confirmed that there is absolutely zero chance the space rock known as 99942 Apophis will strike this planet for at least 100 years. So, phew. Cross that particular doomsday scenario off the list.

What remains true, however, is that on Friday, April 13, 2029, an asteroid wider than three football fields will pass closer to Earth than anything its size has come in recorded history.

An asteroid strike is a disaster; an asteroid flyby, an opportunit­y.

And Apophis offers one of the best chances science has ever had to learn how the Earth came to be — and how we might one day prevent its destructio­n.

In the movies, incoming asteroids appear without warning from the depths of space and speed directly toward us until missiles or Bruce Willis heroically destroy them.

In real life, asteroids orbit the sun on elliptical paths. They are often spotted years, if not decades, before a potential collision — which is not great for dramatic tension but better for planetary survival.

Apophis was discovered in 2004. After calculatin­g its potential orbits, astronomer­s were startled to realize it had a 3% chance of hitting Earth in 2029. In a nod to its horrifying potential, they named it Apophis, an Egyptian god of chaos.

“We were shocked,” said Paul Chodas, who manages NASA’s Near-Earth Object Program Office at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory in La Cañada-Flintridge. “That is very serious and, actually, a very unexpected and rare event.”

The longer astronomer­s track an asteroid, the more clearly defined its orbit becomes. Within a few months, scientists were able to rule out the possibilit­y of a 2029 strike. Within a few years, they were able to dismiss the even smaller chance of a hit in 2036.

And in 2021, radar observatio­ns confirmed that Apophis will not strike when it passes us in 2068, leaving Earth in the clear for at

least a century.

With humanity’s safety assured — from this threat, at least — the coast was clear to geek out on some asteroid science.

“We’ve never seen something that large get that close,” said Lance Benner, a principal scientist at JPL.

“Close,” in the space world, is a relative term. At its nearest, Apophis will pass at roughly 19,000 miles. That’s about one-10th the distance to the moon.

On the big night, Apophis will be visible with the naked eye from parts of Europe and Africa.

An approach this close from an asteroid this big occurs at most every few thousand years, said Davide Farnocchia, a navigation engineer at JPL.

“It’s something that almost never happens, and yet we get to witness it in our lifetime,” Farnocchia said.

 ?? MYUNG J. CHUN — LOS ANGELES TIMES ?? Jet Propulsion Laboratory scientists Lance Benner, Paul Chodas and Mark Haynes are studying the 1,100-foot wide asteroid Apophis.
MYUNG J. CHUN — LOS ANGELES TIMES Jet Propulsion Laboratory scientists Lance Benner, Paul Chodas and Mark Haynes are studying the 1,100-foot wide asteroid Apophis.

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