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    Asteroid Buzzes Earth in Record-Setting Flyby

    An asteroid half the size of a football field buzzed Earth in a historic flyby today (Feb. 15), barely missing our planet just hours after a much smaller object exploded above Russia, injuring perhaps 1,000 people.

    The 150-foot-wide (45 meters) near-Earth asteroid 2012 DA14 cruised within 17,200 miles (27,000 kilometers) of Earth at 2:24 p.m. EST (1924 GMT) today, coming closer than many communications satellites circling our planet.

    The flyby marked the closest approach by such a large asteroid that astronomers have ever known about in advance. But it wasn't even the most dramatic space-rock event of the day.

    That distinction goes to a brilliant fireball that exploded early this morning in the skies over Russia's Chelyabinsk region, which is about 930 miles (1,500 km) east of Moscow. The blast damaged hundreds of buildings and wounded perhaps 1,000 people, according to media reports. [Fireball Explodes Over Russia (Video)]

    Scientists think the Russian fireball was caused by a object that was about 50 feet wide (15 m) and weighed about 7,000 tons before it hit Earth's atmosphere. For comparison, 2012 DA14 tips the scales at 140,000 tons or so. The two space rocks are completely unrelated, NASA researchers say, making the dual events a spooky cosmic coincidence.

    Scientific treat

    Astronomers had been looking forward to 2012 DA14's flyby for a while, since it gave them the rare chance to study a decent-size asteroid up close.

    "We're going to use our radars to bounce radio waves off this asteroid, watch it spin, look at the reflections and understand its size, its shape and perhaps even a little bit about what it's made of," Jim Green, director of NASA's planetary science division, said in a video released by the space agency Thursday (Feb. 14).

    Indeed, researchers around the world trained instruments on 2012 DA14, tracking the space rock as it cruised toward Earth, gave our planet a historically close shave and then slipped silently off into the depths of space once again.

    Cosmic shooting gallery

    There are lessons to be taken from today's asteroid flyby and fireball blast, researchers said.

    "Today's events, both with 2012 DA14 and the Russian meteorite, are a reminder that our solar system is a crowded place," Chris Lewicki, president of asteroid-mining firm Planetary Resources, wrote in a blog post today.

    Our planet has indeed been pummeled by asteroids many times over its history — perhaps most famously 65 million years ago, when a 6-mile-wide (10 km) behemoth wiped out the dinosaurs — and it will continue to be struck in the future.

    The good news is that we probably don't have to worry about a potential civilization-ending strike anytime soon. NASA researchers have mapped out the orbits of 90 percent of the biggest and most dangerous near-Earth asteroids, and none of them seem to be on a collision course with Earth in the foreseeable future.

    But there are a lot of smaller space rocks out there waiting to be discovered and mapped. Researchers have identified just 9,600 near-Earth asteroids to date, but they think a million or more are likely to be out there. (2012 DA14 itself was just discovered in February 2012.)

    Spotting the most threatening of these space rocks may require lofting dedicated asteroid-hunting space telescopes, researchers say. The nonprofit B612 foundation plans to do just that; in 2017 or 2018, it aims to launch an instrument called the Sentinel Space Telescope, which would scan Earth's neighborhood from a Venus-like orbit, freeing it from having to contend with the glare of the sun.

    Astronomers estimate that asteroids the size of 2012 DA14 buzz Earth this closely every 40 years and hit our planet once every 1,200 years or so. If 2012 DA14 did hit us, it would probably cause severe destruction on a local scale. In 1908, a space rock thought to be of similar size exploded over Siberia, flattening about 825 square miles (2,137 square km) of forest.

    Follow SPACE.com senior writer Mike Wall on Twitter @michaeldwall or SPACE.com @Spacedotcom. We're also on Facebook and Google+

    Copyright 2013 SPACE.com, a TechMediaNetwork company. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

    854 comments

    • OneFootForward.  •  2 days 6 hrs ago
      This makes me further understand how vulnerable the Planet Earth and humankind is in our Universe, especially after the Russian Meteor event.
      • Nate 2 days 1 hr ago
        were in a shooting gallery
    • Farttool  •  2 days 5 hrs ago
      I find it amusing how this asteroid was a record setter and it's big day was disrupted by a meteorite in Russia. DA14 apparently has the same luck as I do. Oh and thanks for not hitting my house or truck.
    • Dittonot  •  2 days 5 hrs ago
      The reassuring part is that they didn't even see the Russian rock coming.
    • shakinmyhead  •  2 days 4 hrs ago
      earth travels at 65,000 mph around the sun. The surface of Earth spins around our axis at 1,000mph at the poles 0 mph at the poles (actually a little bit at the poles due to wobble, but very slow!). With an asteroid moving 17,500 mph hour were off by only 14 minutes of being in the same place as the asteroid when it crossed our orbit or as we crossed it's orbit if you want to think of it that way. 17,000 miles is about as close as they come in the vastness of space. If this rock would of been nudged out of the asteroid belt millions of years ago just 15 minutes earlier....KAPOW! It took the asteroid just 6 minutes to clear our ourbit plane.....This was the apple shot off the head of Earth...actually proportionally a grain of rice shot off your head!
    • Cominatcha  •  2 days 6 hrs ago
      Now I know why the pope resigned.
    • Georock  •  2 days 6 hrs ago
      This event may spawn a significant increase in NASA's budget for the near future...
    • Buddha  •  2 days 5 hrs ago
      "NASA researchers have mapped out the orbits of 90 percent of the biggest and most dangerous near-Earth asteroids" No worries about that other 10% we don't know about...
    • Armed American  •  2 days 5 hrs ago
      I had asteroids once....very painful
    • Noods  •  2 days 5 hrs ago
      Record-setting? I think the record has been smashed a few times.
    • Harry  •  2 days 4 hrs ago
      "NASA researchers have mapped out the orbits of 90 percent of the biggest and most dangerous near-Earth asteroids-----" Uh, it's all about the other 10% then, isn't it? The absolute goofy thing here is that in that 10% may be the one that sets off the destruction of most life on our planet. We won't know when it's coming. It'll hit and that will be that. Big deal. Some other species will evolve, in time, to be the Alpha life form. RIP #$%$ sapiens. You had the chance and you made mostly a mess of things. Next!
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