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Only slight chance of asteroid Bennu hitting Earth: NASA

WASHINGTON — An asteroid known as Bennu will pass within half the distance of the Earth to the Moon in the year 2135 but the probability of an impact with our planet in the coming centuries is very slight, scientists said on Wednesday (Aug 11).

A photo of the asteroid Bennu from NASA’s OSIRIS-REx spacecraft taken on Nov 16, 2018 and obtained Dec 3, 2018.

A photo of the asteroid Bennu from NASA’s OSIRIS-REx spacecraft taken on Nov 16, 2018 and obtained Dec 3, 2018.

WASHINGTON — An asteroid known as Bennu will pass within half the distance of the Earth to the Moon in the year 2135 but the probability of an impact with our planet in the coming centuries is very slight, scientists said on Wednesday (Aug 11).

OSIRIS-REx, a NASA spacecraft, spent two years near Bennu, an asteroid that is about 1,650 feet (500 meters) wide, observing its size, shape, mass and composition and monitoring its orbital trajectory around the sun.

Using its robotic arm, the spacecraft also collected a sample from the surface of the asteroid that will help researchers determine the future trajectory of Bennu.

The rocks and dust collected by OSIRIS-REx are scheduled to return to Earth on September 24, 2023.

Bennu was discovered in 1999 and is classified as a potentially hazardous asteroid.

It will make a close approach with Earth in September 2135.

Scientists want to figure out how Earth's gravity and a phenomenon known as the Yarkovsky effect will affect its future trajectory and the potential for an impact on a subsequent orbit.

"The OSIRIS-REx data give us so much more precise information, we can test the limits of our models and calculate the future trajectory of Bennu to a very high degree of certainty through 2135," said Dr Davide Farnocchia, a scientist with the Center for Near Earth Object Studies at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in California.

"We've never modeled an asteroid's trajectory to this precision before," said Dr Farnocchia, lead author of a study published in the journal Icarus.

"The impact probability overall is very small," he stressed. "We shouldn't be worried about it too much."

Dr Farnocchia said the risk from Bennu "is smaller than from the undiscovered population of objects of similar size".

Researchers determined Bennu's total impact probability between now and the year 2300 at about one in 1,750, or 0.057 per cent.

"We are still looking for what we don't know out there — the objects that haven't been found yet," said Mr Lindley Johnson of NASA's Planetary Defence Coordination Office.

Mr Johnson said researchers were studying ways to redirect the orbit of an asteroid should it ever become necessary to do so.

He said an asteroid impacting Earth would cause a crater about 10 to 20 times the size of the object and spawn an area of devastation about 100 times the size of the crater.

But, Mr Johnson added, "We really don't think we need to do anything about Bennu." AFP

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