An asteroid is likely to cross Earth’s orbit on Wednesday. NASA’s asteroid monitoring center has said that 2020 RK2, an asteroid, is likely to cross Earth’s orbit, but it will be about 2,380,000 miles from our planet. The space research agency believes the asteroid is unlikely to cause any damage. The last asteroid to visit Earth’s neighborhood is two weeks from the last one on September 24, when it passed above Earth at a distance of approximately 13,000 miles above our planet’s surface.
NASA is currently closely following asteroid 2020 RK2, which is the size of a Boeing-747. Near-Earth Objects (NEO) from the US space center stated that the asteroid is on the path of colliding with Earth’s orbit on October 7. Astronomers say NASA first saw the asteroid last month.
The asteroid is about 118 to 265 feet wide, according to NASA, and is traveling at a speed of 6.68 kilometers per second. The space corps estimates that 2020 RK2 is likely to pass beyond Earth at a great distance and even the most enthusiastic sky watchers are unlikely to see the asteroid from Earth.
Not just an asteroid, NASA expects no fewer than five of them to zoom past Earth on Thursday. Before 2020 RK2, on October 6, another 2020 RR2 asteroid, measuring 26 meters in diameter, will fly over Earth at a safe distance of 6.2 million kilometers.
Asteroids are small rocky objects that orbit the Sun. Most asteroids lie between the orbits of Mars and Jupiter. Scientists say that a large number of these asteroids formed about 4.5 billion years ago.
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