http://www.smh.com.au/national/asteroid-plays-chicken-with-earth-20090303-8nge.html


Asteroid plays chicken with Earth 
  a.. Richard Macey 
  b.. March 4, 2009 
  c.. 
 

IT COULD have put an end to our worries about the economy and those sharks at 
Sydney beaches.

At 12.40 yesterday morning, as the city slept, a previously unknown asteroid 
swept about 60,000 kilometres over the south-western Pacific.

In astronomical terms it was a close call. Estimated to be between 30 metres 
and 50 metres wide, it passed almost seven times closer than the moon.

"No object of that size, or larger, has been observed to come closer to the 
Earth," said Rob McNaught, of the Siding Spring Observatory, near Coonabarabran.

In 1908 an object possibly up to 50 metres across flattened some 2000 square 
kilometres of Siberian forest.

Mr McNaught said yesterday's asteroid was probably smaller but it could do a 
lot of damage to a city. If it had crashed into the ocean "I imagine it would 
produce a tsunami", he said.

Funded by NASA to search for asteroids bigger than one kilometre across, Mr 
McNaught spotted the object on Friday night. Within 24 hours astronomers had 
calculated it would narrowly miss the planet.

Mr McNaught said as the asteroid approached Earth yesterday morning it had 
glowed 5000 times brighter than on Friday night. "It was so bright I could 
actually observe it through the cloud. That is very rare," he said.

He believed that if 2009 DD45 had been on a collision course with a populated 
part of the planet, there would have been time to act. "A lot of people falsely 
claim there is nothing you could do, but there is. If there is an asteroid 
coming, and you have 24 hours, you can evacuate."

About 1000 asteroids are known to have come close enough to be classified as 
potentially hazardous.

While a collision with a one-kilometre-wide asteroid could cause global 
devastation, Mr McNaught said one that was just 300 metres wide could throw the 
world into "a short-term winter".

Objects bigger than one kilometre wide were likely to hit the world only every 
few million years but ones large enough to threaten a city crashed "probably 
once a century".


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