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On June 30, commemorate the 10th anniversary of ‘Asteroid Day’

June 30, 2015, was the first when “people from around the world come together to learn about asteroids” and what can be done to protect the planet from asteroid and comet impacts, according to the United Nations.

This year’s Asteroid Day has worldwide and online  including a presentation by the Lunar and Planetary Institute, “.”

Monday, June 30, is a significant date in the history of earth impacts. On that date in 1908, the “,” a stony (not icy) body between 164 and 262 feet in diameter, entered the atmosphere at around 33,500 miles per hour.

It caused a four-megaton explosion, equivalent to the blast energy 250 times more powerful than the atomic bomb dropped on Hiroshima, at 3 to 6 miles altitude over Tunguska, Russia, a remote area in Siberia.

devastated 830 square miles and flattened 80 million trees, representing the largest asteroid crash to occur in modern times. Asteroid Day is held every year to commemorate this impact, as a reminder to the world that planetary defense against asteroids and comets matters.

We had the in 2013, which caused a historic number of injuries and damage to buildings the most ever recorded from an asteroid/meteorite event. The Chelyabinsk event was the most documented asteroid explosion and meteorite fall ever, due to the number of videos, sound recordings, photographs, witness interviews and the precise recovery process of associated meteorites collected.

Chelyabinsk also improved our knowledge about the that are smaller than a kilometer. The smaller asteroids like Chelyabinsk pose a greater hazard for damage than previously thought. In December 2018, of Chelyabinsk took place over the Bering Sea, reaffirming that these kinds of events happen more often than we would like.

The , and the are working to develop a defensive capability, as well as improved detection for millions of asteroids.

Here are important highlights in planetary defense that have, or will, significantly improve our protection from an incoming asteroid through detection and deflection:

  • The soon-to-be-operational Vera Rubin Observatory will be capable of discovering millions of new asteroids. VRO recently announced it discovered 2,104 new asteroids during its inaugural “First Look.”
  • NASA has established a .
  • Interagency exercises, such as the held in Maryland, are regularly conducted to test real-world scenarios and responses.
  • In 2021, NASA got approval for a space-based telescope mission, , designed specifically for finding space rocks large and small like Chelyabinsk. This mission will greatly improve our ability to detect space rocks, especially those that lurk near the sun, and that cannot be readily seen by Earth-based telescopes. NEO Surveyor Principal Investigator Dr. Amy Mainzer told ݮý: “We’re excited to ramp up work on the spacecraft bus starting this fall in preparation for launch in September 2027.”
  • NASA’s mission changed the orbit of an asteroid in September 2022.
  • A worldwide community of citizen astronomers in conjunction with the are actively participating in planetary defense by making real-time observations using telescopes made by . I bought one of their  to participate in their citizen science projects. Anyone with a telescope can participate as well.

A last point to consider: “The dinosaurs are dead because they didn’t have telescopes or a space program.” I use this phrase of mine to highlight what we need to do to avoid going the way of the dinosaurs who were killed off by an 66 million years ago.

The cosmic clock is ticking …

Follow Greg Redfern on , and his  to keep up with the latest news in astronomy and space exploration.

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