A 3-foot asteroid is expected to crash-land on Earth in just a few hours, and scientists say the fiery collision will be historic.
The rocky body will plummet towards Luzon Island in the Philippines at approximately 12:46 pm ET, according to the European Space Agency.
A 3-foot asteroid is expected to crash into Earth’s atmosphere later today, and scientists say it is the ninth ever to be spotted before impact[/caption]The Catalina Sky Survey detected the object, dubbed CAQTDL2, this morning.
It is expected to enter the atmosphere at roughly 11 miles per second, or just under 40,000 miles per hour.
While CAQTDL2 may seem like a hazard, asteroids of this size and speed are nothing to fear.
CSS says the small body will “harmlessly impact Earth’s atmosphere.”
Asteroids a few feet in diameter strike fairly often but are rarely detected.
Today’s crash-landing is one of just a handful of historic sightings.
“This is just the ninth asteroid that humankind has ever spotted before impact,” ESA posted on X, formerly Twitter.
The agency renamed the asteroid 2024 RW1. Designations follow a specific pattern, with the year of discovery followed by two letters that indicate order.
Objects detected between January 1 and 15 are named in order of their discovery – AA, AB, AC, and so on.
As today’s asteroid is expected to burn up in the atmosphere, it poses no danger to human life.
It may appear as a glowing streak in the sky, giving viewers on Earth a spectacular show.
That is if cloud cover from Typhoon Yagi doesn’t occlude it from sight.
Yagi built into a Category 3 hurricane after touching down in the northern Philippines on Monday as a tropical storm.
It may seem odd for a fireball to coincide with a natural disaster, but Nasa estimates that around 15,000 tons of space dust hit Earth each year.
The small, rocky body will enter Earth’s atmosphere above the island of Luzon in the Philippines, where it will likely burn up[/caption]Asteroids are chunks of rock, ice, and metal that orbit the Sun. They do not have an atmosphere and are a fraction of the size of planets.
The largest swathe of asteroids lies between the orbits of Mars and Jupiter.
However, many fall within the orbits of Mars, Earth, Venus, and Mercury.
Small asteroids bombard our planet daily, but the larger the size, the greater the risk.
The most significant fireball event in over a century occurred over Russia in 2013.
A rocky body the size of a small building disintegrated above Chelyabinsk, raining down a shower of debris.
Here's what you need to know, according to Nasa...