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One More Thing Before We Go: The Brightside
Yeah, I know the economy sucks, and we’re all wondering if there’s going to be a Christmas this year, but Gawker wants you to look to the bright side — at least we haven’t been hit by a civilization-destroying asteroid. Yet.
According to Gawker by way of the Discovery Channel, there have been some near-misses. 5 really scary examples after the jump:
1. Asteroid: Tunguska event
Year: 1908
Proximity to Earth (number of times Earth/Moon distance): Exploded metres above ground in the Russian wilderness
In a nutshell: This asteroid or comet fragment was thought to have burned and flattened trees with a 10-15 megaton explosion just before it would have made landfall. Scientists estimate such an event happens every 300 years or so.
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2. Asteroid: 1937 UB
Year: 1937
Proximity to Earth (number of times Earth/Moon distance): Twice the distance from the Earth to the Moon
In a nutshell: Long before this asteroid could have been detected in time—at the time—it passed razor-close to Earth—it’s diameter? 1.2 km—more than enough to cause plenty of worldwide damage.
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3. Asteroid: 4581 Asclepius (1989 FC)
Year: 1989
Proximity to Earth (number of times Earth/Moon distance): 700,000 km (About twice the distance from the Earth to the Moon)
In a nutshell: Most frighteningly, this 1 km-wide asteroid passed precisely where the Earth had been only six hours before.
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4. Asteroid: 2002 MN
Year: 2002
Proximity to Earth (number of times Earth/Moon distance): 0.3 (120,000 km)
In a nutshell: This passed inside the Moon’s orbit, missing Earth by a wide margin within the orbit. That’s good news, as the 80-metre-wide asteroid would have caused damage over 2,000 square kilometres if it actually made contact with Earth.
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5. Asteroid: 2002 FH
Year: 2004
Proximity to Earth (number of times Earth/Moon distance): 0.1 (42,000 km)
In a nutshell: LINEAR, the asteroid tracking robot telescope showed this 30 metre object would pass within the ream of some earth-orbiting satellites – the closest pass ever predicted up to this point.