Have you heard that a giant asteroid is due to strike Earth sometime between Sept. 15 and Sept. 28?
If so, you probably thought it was a hoax. And you'd be right.
But some people who read "numerous recent blogs and web postings" about impending doom from space weren't sufficiently skeptical. NASA on Thursday sought to clarify:
The space agency, in a statement , said: "On one of those dates, as rumors go, there will be an impact — 'evidently' near Puerto Rico — causing wanton destruction to the Atlantic and Gulf coasts of the United States and Mexico, as well as Central and South America."
"If there were any object large enough to do that type of destruction in September, we would have seen something of it by now," Paul Chodas, manager of NASA's Near-Earth Object (read: close meteors and asteroids) office at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory, said in the statement.
"In fact, NASA's Near-Earth Object Observations Program says there have been no asteroids or comets observed that would impact Earth anytime in the foreseeable future. All known Potentially Hazardous Asteroids have less than a 0.01% chance of impacting Earth in the next 100 years," the statement added.
But what if an asteroid really was barreling toward an impact with Earth? Could we stop it?
NPR's Jacob Goldstein spoke with former astronaut Ed Lu in a piece that aired on All Things Considered on Thursday.
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