This animation shows
asteroid 2022 EB5's predicted orbit around the Sun before impacting into the
Earth’s atmosphere on March 11, 2022. The asteroid – estimated to be about 6 ½
feet (2 meters) wide – was discovered only two hours before impact. Credits:
NASA/JPL-Caltech
Asteroid 2022 EB5 was too small to pose a hazard to Earth, but its
discovery marks the fifth time that any asteroid has been observed before impacting
into the atmosphere.
A small asteroid hit Earth’s atmosphere over the Norwegian Sea before
disintegrating on March 11, 2022. But this event wasn’t a complete surprise:
Astronomers knew it was on a collision course, predicting exactly where and
when the impact would happen.
Two hours before the asteroid made impact, K. Sarneczky at the Piszkéstető Observatory in northern
Hungary first reported observations of the small object to the Minor Planet Center – the
internationally recognized clearinghouse for the position measurements of small
celestial bodies. The object was posted on the Minor Planet Center’s Near-Earth
Object Confirmation Page to flag it for additional observations that would
confirm it as a previously unknown asteroid.
NASA’s “Scout” impact hazard assessment system then took these early
measurements to calculate the trajectory of 2022 EB5. As soon as Scout
determined that 2022 EB5 was going to hit Earth’s atmosphere, the system
alerted the Center for Near Earth Object Studies (CNEOS) and NASA’s Planetary Defense Coordination Office, and flagged the object
on the Scout webpage to notify the
near-Earth object observing community. Maintained by CNEOS at NASA’s Jet
Propulsion Laboratory in Southern California, Scout automatically searches the
Minor Planet Center’s database for possible new short-term impactors. CNEOS
calculates every known near-Earth asteroid orbit to improve impact hazard
assessments in support of the Planetary Defense Coordination Office.
“Scout had only 14 observations over 40 minutes from one observatory to
work with when it first identified the object as an impactor. We were able to
determine the possible impact locations, which initially extended from western
Greenland to off the coast of Norway,” said Davide Farnocchia, a navigation
engineer at JPL who developed Scout. “As more observatories tracked the
asteroid, our calculations of its trajectory and impact location became more
precise.”
Fully interactive follow link: https://www.nasa.gov/feature/jpl/nasa-system-predicts-impact-of-small-asteroid
Fully interactive, Eyes
on Asteroids uses science data to help visualize asteroid and comet orbits
around the Sun. Zoom in to travel along with your favorite spacecraft as they
explore these fascinating near-Earth objects in beautiful 3D. Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech
Scout determined that 2022 EB5 would enter the atmosphere southwest of Jan
Mayen, a Norwegian island nearly 300 miles (470 kilometers) off the east coast
of Greenland and northeast of Iceland. At 5:23 p.m. EST (2:23 p.m. PST), 2022
EB5 hit the atmosphere as predicted by Scout, and infrasound
detectors have confirmed the impact
occurred at the predicted time.
From observations of the asteroid as it approached Earth and the energy
measured by infrasound detectors at time of impact, 2022 EB5 is estimated to
have been about 6 1/2 feet (2 meters) in size. Tiny asteroids of this size get
bright enough to be detected only in the last few hours before their impact (or
before they make a very close approach to Earth). They are much smaller than
the objects that the Planetary Defense Coordination Office is tasked by NASA
with detecting and warning about.
“Tiny asteroids like 2022 EB5 are numerous, and they impact into the
atmosphere quite frequently – roughly every 10 months or so,” said Paul Chodas,
the director of CNEOS at JPL. “But very few of these asteroids have actually
been detected in space and observed extensively prior to impact, basically
because they are very faint until the last few hours, and a survey telescope
has to observe just the right spot of sky at the right time for one to be
detected.”
A larger asteroid with hazardous impact potential would be discovered much
farther from Earth. NASA’s goal is to keep track of such asteroids and to
calculate their trajectories in order to have many years’ notice ahead of a
potential impact should one ever be identified. But this real-world event with
a very small asteroid allowed the planetary defense community to exercise
capabilities and gave some confidence that the impact prediction models at
CNEOS are highly capable of informing the response to the potential impact of a
larger object.
2022 EB5 is only the fifth small asteroid to be detected in space before
hitting Earth’s atmosphere. The first asteroid to be discovered and tracked
well before hitting Earth was 2008 TC3, which entered the
atmosphere over Sudan and broke up in October 2008. That 13-foot-wide
(4-meter-wide) asteroid scattered hundreds of small meteorites over the Nubian
Desert. As surveys become more sophisticated and sensitive, more of these
harmless objects will be detected before entering the atmosphere.
More information about CNEOS, asteroids, and near-Earth objects can be
found at: https://cneos.jpl.nasa.gov and https://www.jpl.nasa.gov/asteroid-watch
For more information about NASA’s Planetary Defense Coordination Office,
visit: https://www.nasa.gov/planetarydefense
Source: https://www.nasa.gov/feature/jpl/nasa-system-predicts-impact-of-small-asteroid
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