This 130 feet asteroid has a 1-in-7,000 chance of hitting Earth this fall and that’s pretty close

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This fall, Earth has about a 1-in-7,000 chance of getting an uninvited extraterrestrial visitor: asteroid 2006 QV89.

2006 QV89 measures 130 feet (40 meters) in diameter and is is expected to whiz by our planet on Sept. 9, 2019.

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This Asteroid Has a 1-in-7,000 Chance of Hitting Earth This Fall. Photo via Youtube video

Compared to the 6-mile-long (10 kilometers) asteroid that killed the nonavian dinosaurs about 66 million years ago, 2006 QV89 is pretty dinky, measuring just 130 feet (40 meters) in diameter, or about the length of two bowling alleys placed end to end.

The ESA is monitoring the asteroid’s route, but the space rock is unlikely to careen into Earth. According to the ESA’s modeling, 2006 QV89 will likely get as close as about 4.2 million miles (6.7 million km) to the planet. To put that in perspective, the moon is 238,900 miles (384,400 km) away.

That said, there is a 1-in-7,299 chance that 2006 QV89 will hit the planet, the ESA said.

As its name suggests, asteroid 2006 QV89 was discovered on Aug. 29, 2006 by the Catalina Sky Survey based at an observatory near Tucson, Arizona. The asteroid is actually quite a frequent visitor to our planet. After its 2019 flyby, the object is expected to swoop by Earth in 2032, 2045 and 2062.

NASA, which also tracks near-Earth objects, paired up with the ESA last month to live-tweet information about how the government and scientists should handle an actual asteroid strike. However, fans of the movie “Armageddon” should forget about blowing up big asteroids with bombs. A new study found that the larger the asteroid, the harder it will be to blow up.

[ESA, LiveScience]

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