Wednesday, January 30th. It's the middle of a work week.
Will it be visible in North America during the nighttime?
Or anywhere in the world? What telescopes will be pointed at this event if it should happen?
What are your thoughts?
Picture indicates track of the asteroid on approach to Mars.
From THE FUTURE OF THINGS ---
http://www.tfot.info/news/1082/asteroid-to-hit-mars.htmlThis past November, the NASA-funded Catalina Sky Survey near Tucson, Arizona discovered an asteroid receding from the Earth, heading towards Mars with. Astronomers estimate there is a one in 25 (four percent) chance of that this asteroid will directly hit the red planet in early 2008. The asteroid, which has been named 2007 WD5, is considered highly unusual, as NASA astronomer Steve Chesley recently explained: "We’re used to dealing with odds like one-in-a-million and we estimate such impacts occur on Mars every thousand years or so".
The asteroid, which was discovered by the US space agency’s Near Earth Object Program (NEOP), is considered to be of no threat to Earth. Despite this, the asteroid has been put on a “watch list”, as it is a member of an interesting class of small objects that are both near-Earth objects and "Mars crossers."
NEOP scientists say that the asteroid’s exact course is difficult to predict, but there is a chance it will crash into Mars on January 30th, producing a crater 1 kilometer in diameter. The impact itself could release over three megatons of energy and is comparable to the Tunguska event of 1908 in Siberia, Russia. Unlike the Tunguska event, where the impacting object was disintegrated before it hit the Earth, Mars’ atmosphere is much thinner and therefore it is likeier that the asteroid will hit the planet's surface.
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If this is old news, please EEXXXXXXCCCCCUUUUSSSSEE ME. I've been in Florida for a couple of weeks, surrounded by sun, sand, ocean and Disney revelers.