Asteroid 1999 RQ36, which has a one-in-1,000 chance of hitting the Earth
before the year 2200, would cause an explosion equivalent to hundreds of
nuclear bombs detonating at once.

An analysis of its orbit has predicted that it is most likely to hit us
on September 24, 2182 but scientists want to collect a sample of the
rock to help forecast its trajectory more accurately.

If Nasa gives the plan the green light, the spacecraft would blast off
in 2106 to map out and collect rock samples from the asteroid, which is
1,800 feet-wide.

The planned mission, called OSIRIS-Rex, is one of two finalists in
competition for funding as part of the cash-strapped US space agency's
New Frontiers program.

The other contender is a mission to land on Venus. The competing plans
will come under discussion at a two-day Nasa workshop in Washington DC
starting on today. The winner will be announced next year.

Nasa has officially classified RQ36 as a 'potentially hazardous
asteroid' as it passes within about 280,000 miles of Earth. Its orbit,
which brings it closer to Earth, makes it easier to reach than other
asteroids.

Michael Drake, who would lead the OSIRIS-Rex team if the project was
chosen, said: "Being one of the easiest targets to get to coincidentally
means that it also can easily hit us, too."

Clark Chapman, a planetary scientist at Southwest Research Institute in
Boulder, Colorado, said an impact from RQ36 would cause a catastrophic
explosion.

"It would be an enormous impact, like hundreds of the biggest nuclear
bombs ever built exploding at once, creating a crater maybe 10
kilometers across," he told National Geographic magazine.

An expert panel appointed by Barack Obama, the US president, to assess
Nasa's future space programme last year recommended bypassing the Moon
in favour of a mission to land on an unidentified asteroid.

The plan mirrors the plot of the 1998 Hollywood film Deep Impact, in
which the White House sends a spaceship to land on an asteroid which is
hurtling towards the Earth.

The European Space Agency announced in 2008 that it plans to select a
small asteroid, less than 0.6 miles across, near Earth and send a
spacecraft to drill for dust and rubble for analysis.

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/science/space/7936145/Nasa-could-land-probe-o
n-asteroid-hurtling-towards-Earth.html
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