Very few
hours later, it hit Earth travelling at 38,000 mph and caused a huge fireball
to appear in the sky above Botswana, Africa. ‘This was a much smaller object
than we are tasked to detect and warn about,’ said Lindley Johnson, Planetary
Defense Officer at NASA Headquarters.
‘However,
this real-world event allows us to exercise our capabilities and gives some
confidence our impact prediction models are adequate to respond to the
potential impact of a larger object.’
Now, you
might think that 19 hours between detection and impact is a very short space of
time. Think again. Humanity has only detected an asteroid on a collision course
a handful of times – and only one other of these sightings took place with
ample time to spare before it hit us.
‘The discovery
of asteroid 2018 LA is only the third time that an asteroid has been discovered
to be on an impact trajectory,’ said Paul Chodas, manager of NASA’s Center for
Near-Earth Object Studies. NASA’s Center for Near-Earth Object Studies was
created to observe close asteroids.
‘It is also only the second time that the high probability of an impact was predicted well ahead of the event itself.’
The Minor
Planetary Centre said ‘object no longer exists (in its original form),
following its entry into the Earth’s atmosphere on 2 June 2018. This doesn’t
mean the asteroid touched down on Earth and was spirited away by shadowy men in
dark suits.
It is likely
to have been totally obliterated when it smashed into our planet’s atmosphere,
with very little debris falling to Earth.
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