The threat from space threat from space

Last week, a meteor exploded over Russia and a large asteroid whizzed past Earth. What if the near miss were a direct hit?

Do asteroids hit Earth often?

Hundreds of them enter the atmosphere every minute. That’s because our solar system contains several bands of space rocks—asteroids and comets of varying size and composition—which can veer off into new orbits that intersect with Earth’s. Almost all the objects that reach our planet are mere inches in diameter and burn up in the atmosphere. A handful of times a year, space rocks up to 10 feet in diameter make it to the planet’s surface. Once a millennium, an asteroid larger than 250 feet penetrates the atmosphere, causing major but localized damage (see box). Every 1 million years, on average, an asteroid over a mile in diameter strikes Earth, with catastrophic consequences. An asteroid six miles in diameter is thought to have wiped out the dinosaurs 66 million years ago. If one that size were to hit Earth tomorrow, it would instantly erase all life within 1,000 miles of impact, and probably throw so much dust into the atmosphere that it would blot out the sun for years, killing off most species.

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