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Odds Increase For a Martian Asteroid Impact

December 31, 2007 By Sam Sloan 2 Comments

Source: Fox SciTech News

0_21_122007_mars.jpgLOS ANGELES — The chance of a football field-sized asteroid plowing into Mars next month has been increased to 4 percent, scientists said Friday after analyzing archival data.

Though still a long shot, some researchers are hoping for a cosmic smash.

“I think it’ll be cool,” said Don Yeomans, who heads the Near-Earth Object Program at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory. “Usually when an asteroid is headed toward Earth, I’m not rooting for an impact.”

The space rock, known as the nondescript 2007 WD5, was discovered in late November by the NASA-funded Catalina Sky Survey in Arizona.

Based on the latest information available, scientists said last week there was a 1-in-75 chance the asteroid could hit Mars on Jan. 30.

The odds were increased to 1-in-25 this week after a Ph.D. student pored through the archives and plotted the asteroid’s motions before its official discovery.

The new information allowed scientists to improve their calculations of the asteroid’s orbit and flight path.

Scientists will continue to monitor the asteroid to better predict the possibility of a Martian impact. Yeomans said he expects the odds to decrease with new observations gathered early next year.

The likelihood of an asteroid hit usually “peaks before plummeting to zero with additional data,” he said.

The asteroid poses no threat to Earth and is closing in on the Red Planet at 27,900 mph.

Should a collision occur, it would likely blast a half-mile-wide crater north of where the rover Opportunity has been exploring since 2004.

The impact could release energy similar to the 1908 Tunguska object that exploded over remote central Siberia and wiped out 60 million trees.

Filed Under: Space News Tagged With: Mars

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Comments

  1. tim and darcy low says

    January 2, 2008 at 1:08 am

    wonder if things will change here. like the weather and stuff if this happens. maybe after this we should send up another probe. bet we find water after thing thing hits it!
    and what ever happened to that face thing?? was that just sand?

    darcy

    Reply
  2. Kurt says

    January 2, 2008 at 4:56 pm

    Tim, here you go!

    http://science.nasa.gov/headlines/y2001/ast24may_1.htm

    Reply

Trackbacks

  1. siberia in 1908 | Dot info news says:
    January 12, 2008 at 6:39 pm

    […] Odds Increase For a Martian Asteroid Impact […]

    Reply

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