A GERMAN schoolboy of 13 revised NASA calculations, upping
the estimate of the risk that the asteroid Apophis will impact
the Earth.
The Potsdamer Neuerster Nachrichten reported Tuesday that
Nico Marquardt used orbital observations from the Astrophysics
Institute of Potsdam to correct NASA's original estimate of
a 1 in 45,000 chance of a collision up to 1 in 450.
He considered that the asteroid might collide with any one
or more of 40,000 satellites during its next closest approach
to Earth, which will occur on April 13, 2029.
The satellites orbit the planet at up to 35,880 kilometers
altitude, moving at 1.9 miles (3.07 kilometres) per second.
The asteroid Apophis will pass by Earth at 32,500 kilometres
distance.
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If Apophis hits one or more satellite(s) in 2029, that could
alter its solar orbit enough to make it impact Earth on its
next pass in 2036.
NASA had apparently overlooked the chance that Apophis might
hit a satellite or two in 2029. It reportedly told the European
Space Agency that Marquardt's revised estimate is correct.
Asteroid Apophis is a mass of solid iron and indium 320 meters
in diameter and weighing 200 billion tons. If it impacts Earth,
the event will be catastrophic. A similar asteroid impact
in the Gulf of Mexico millions of years ago is thought to
have killed off the dinosaurs.
The AFP story is here.