Earth's satellites at risk if asteroid smashes into Moon: study
If a huge asteroid smashes into the Moon in 2032, the gigantic explosion would send debris streaming towards Earth that would threaten satellites and create a spectacular meteor shower, according to researchers.
Earlier this year there were briefly fears that the 60-metre-wide (200-foot-wide) asteroid called 2024 YR4, which is big enough to level a city, would strike Earth on December 22, 2032.
It was given the highest chance -- 3.1 percent -- of hitting our home planet that scientists have ever measured for such a giant space rock.
Subsequent observations from telescopes definitively ruled out a direct hit on Earth.
However, the odds that it will crash into the Moon have risen to 4.3 percent, according to data from the James Webb space telescope in May.
A new preprint study, which has not been peer-reviewed, is the first to estimate how such a collision could affect Earth.
It would be the largest asteroid to hit the Moon in around 5,000 years, lead study author Paul Wiegert of Canada's University of Western Ontario told AFP.
The impact would be "comparable to a large nuclear explosion in terms of the amount of energy released", he added.
Up to 100 million kilograms (220 million pounds) of material would shoot out from the Moon's surface, according to a series of simulations run by the researchers.
If the asteroid hit the side of the Moon facing Earth -- which is roughly a 50-percent chance -- up to 10 percent of this debris could be pulled in by Earth's gravity over the following days, they said.
- 'Like a bullet' -
Earth's atmosphere would protect the surface from the millimetre- to centimetre-sized lunar rocks, Weigert said. 0.04-2.54
But these meteors could be capable of destroying some satellites -- and there are expected to be a lot more of those orbiting the planet by 2032.
"A centimetre-sized rock travelling at tens of thousands of metres per second is a lot like a bullet," Wiegert said.
In the days after the impact, there could be more than 1,000 times the normal number of meteors threatening Earth's satellites, he added.
Meanwhile, those of us on the ground would be treated to a "spectacular" meteor shower lighting up the night sky, the study said.
But the current odds of a direct hit on the near side of the Moon remain at just two percent, Wiegert emphasised.
The asteroid is not expected to be visible again until 2028, so the world will have to wait to find out more.
If a direct hit is eventually found to be likely, humanity probably has enough time to plan a mission to spare the Moon.
"I'm sure it will be considered," Wiegert said.
The asteroid is half as wide and has 10 percent of the mass of Dimorphos, which NASA's DART mission smashed into in 2022, successfully changing its trajectory.
If 2024 YR4 is on a collision course with the Moon, it would be "a good target" for another test of our planetary defences, Wiegert said.
But if not, trying to deflect something zooming so close to Earth could be a little "dangerous", he added.
The preprint study, which published on the arXiv database last week, has been submitted to the Astrophysical Journal Letters.
dl/gil
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
2 hours ago
- Yahoo
AIAA Welcomes ISS National Laboratory to 2025 ASCEND
Additional Sessions Will Showcase the Growing Low Earth Orbit Ecosystem ASCEND RESTON, Va., June 23, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- The American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics (AIAA) and the Center for the Advancement of Science in Space® (CASIS), manager of the International Space Station (ISS) National Laboratory, announced they are expanding programming for the upcoming ASCEND event this summer, 22–24 July, in Las Vegas. This announcement comes following the discontinuation of the ISS National Laboratory's flagship event, the ISS Research and Development Conference (ISSRDC), originally planned for 28–31 July, Seattle, Wash. ISSRDC was designed to address pressing research and development challenges through space-based inquiry. ASCEND will now serve the broader space and microgravity community in one powerful event. ASCEND Welcomes ISS National Lab and its Community in July2025 ASCEND will now offer several high-impact sessions from the planned ISSRDC program. The new content will highlight how the space station continues to provide a valuable platform for research and technology development that benefits humanity and enables a robust and sustainable market in low Earth orbit (LEO). More information on sessions will be announced shortly. 'We warmly welcome the broader ISS National Lab communities to ASCEND. It's a natural evolution to the ASCEND program, further showcasing the cutting-edge scientific breakthroughs in low Earth orbit. It will be an unparalleled experience for the entire space community,' said Clay Mowry, chief executive officer, AIAA. 'We invite those who were planning to attend ISSRDC to discover ASCEND in a bold new way.' Registration for 2025 ASCEND is available with early-bird rates through 23 June. Journalists can request a Press Pass online. 'As we mark a pivotal moment for the space station and the LEO economy, we're thrilled to expand ASCEND programming to showcase the ISS National Lab community,' said Ray Lugo, chief executive officer, ISS National Lab. 'Over the years, ISSRDC has built deeply engaged user, investor, and partner communities, and ASCEND will allow our communities to significantly build upon the scientific discoveries, commercial innovations, and relationships in a more expansive forum, as we showcase the impact of space-based research and its impacts on humanity and commerce alike.' Since 2020, ASCEND has promoted the collaborative, interdisciplinary, outcomes-driven community of professionals, students, and enthusiasts around the world who are accelerating humanity's progress toward our off-world future. Lockheed Martin is the premier sponsor of ASCEND. For the most updated program information, visit and follow ASCEND on LinkedIn, Instagram, and X/Twitter. AIAA Contact: Rebecca Gray, RebeccaG@ 804-397-5270 ISS National Lab Contact: Patrick O'Neill, poneill@ 904-806-0035 About AIAA AIAA is the world's largest aerospace technical society. With nearly 30,000 individual members from 91 countries, and 100 corporate members, AIAA brings together industry, academia, and government to advance engineering and science in aviation, space, and defense. Visit or follow us: X/Twitter, Facebook, LinkedIn, and Instagram. About the International Space Station (ISS) National LaboratoryThe International Space Station (ISS) is a one-of-a-kind laboratory that enables research and technology development not possible on Earth. As a public service enterprise, the ISS National Laboratory® allows researchers to leverage this multiuser facility to improve quality of life on Earth, mature space-based business models, advance science literacy in the future workforce, and expand a sustainable and scalable market in low Earth orbit. Through this orbiting national laboratory, research resources on the ISS are available to support non-NASA science, technology, and education initiatives from U.S. government agencies, academic institutions, and the private sector. The Center for the Advancement of Science in Space® (CASIS®) manages the ISS National Lab, under Cooperative Agreement with NASA, facilitating access to its permanent microgravity research environment, a powerful vantage point in low Earth orbit, and the extreme and varied conditions of space. To learn more about the ISS National Lab, visit our website. A photo accompanying this announcement is available at in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data
Yahoo
3 hours ago
- Yahoo
Deep space asteroid sample contains unexpected ingredient
On December 5, 2020, a small capsule jettisoned from Japan's Hayabusa2 spacecraft as it made a scheduled flyby over Earth. The payload landed in the Australian outback as planned, capping a 6-year roundtrip journey to survey the asteroid Ryugu. Since then, researchers including a team at Hiroshima University, have analyzed the unprecedented mineral samples collected from the distant space rock. But according to their most recent findings, published in the journal Meteoritics & Planetary Science, one of those minerals defies planetary scientists' previous theories on Ryugu's creation. The consequences may help clarify the solar system's evolution, and the surprising complexities inside some of its most primitive asteroids. To understand Ryugu, it's important to first understand its origins. Researchers believe the half-mile wide, 496-million-ton rock belongs to a parent body that formed 1.8–2.9 million years after the birth of our solar system. This asteroid family—likely Eulalia or Polana—coalesced from icy mixtures of carbon dioxide and water at the outer edges of the solar system. Over millions of years, radioactive elements decayed and generated heat inside the parent body to likely reach around 122 degrees Fahrenheit. It's believed that a catastrophic impact with another asteroid created the carbon-heavy Ryugu, which is composed of rocks similar to the CI chondrite meteorites that frequently streak through Earth's atmosphere. But while CI chondrites are commonplace, enstatite chondrites are not. These rare asteroids form under extremely high temperature conditions inside the solar system's inner region. Enstatite chondrites contain different minerals such as djerfisherite, a potassium-laden iron-nickel sulfide. Based on everything scientists know about asteroids, Ryugu shouldn't include an ingredient like djerfisherite—but it does. 'Its occurrence is like finding a tropical seed in Arctic ice,' said Masaaki Miyahara, a science and engineering associate professor Hiroshima University and one of the study's co-authors. Miyahara and colleagues spotted Ryugu's djerfisherite while using field-emission transmission electron microscopy (FE-TEM) to better understand how terrestrial weathering affected the asteroid's mineral layers. According to Miyahara, the discovery 'challenges the notion that Ryugu is compositionally uniform' and opens new questions about primitive asteroid evolution. Experts know from past experiments that djerfisherite can be created when potassium-rich fluids and iron-nickel sulfides interact at temperatures over 662 degrees Fahrenheit. Given their understanding of enstatite chondrites, this led Miyahara's team to two potential explanations. 'The discovery of djerfisherite in a Ryugu grain suggests that materials with very different formation histories may have mixed early in the solar system's evolution, or that Ryugu experienced localized, chemically heterogeneous conditions not previously recognized,' explained Miyahara. Early evidence suggests the latter theory is more likely, but researchers can't be sure solely based on the currently available information. Regardless, the discovery revealed that the solar system's earliest eras hosted some unexpected deep space interactions. Moving forward, the team hopes to conduct isotopic studies on the samples to narrow down the minerals' origins. Meanwhile, the sample's delivery probe Hayabusa2 is currently en route for a 2031 rendezvous with its next asteroid—a small, rapidly spinning rock known as 1998 KY.
Yahoo
5 hours ago
- Yahoo
Earth's satellites at risk if asteroid smashes into Moon: study
If a huge asteroid smashes into the Moon in 2032, the gigantic explosion would send debris streaming towards Earth that would threaten satellites and create a spectacular meteor shower, according to researchers. Earlier this year there were briefly fears that the 60-metre-wide (200-foot-wide) asteroid called 2024 YR4, which is big enough to level a city, would strike Earth on December 22, 2032. It was given the highest chance -- 3.1 percent -- of hitting our home planet that scientists have ever measured for such a giant space rock. Subsequent observations from telescopes definitively ruled out a direct hit on Earth. However, the odds that it will crash into the Moon have risen to 4.3 percent, according to data from the James Webb space telescope in May. A new preprint study, which has not been peer-reviewed, is the first to estimate how such a collision could affect Earth. It would be the largest asteroid to hit the Moon in around 5,000 years, lead study author Paul Wiegert of Canada's University of Western Ontario told AFP. The impact would be "comparable to a large nuclear explosion in terms of the amount of energy released", he added. Up to 100 million kilograms (220 million pounds) of material would shoot out from the Moon's surface, according to a series of simulations run by the researchers. If the asteroid hit the side of the Moon facing Earth -- which is roughly a 50-percent chance -- up to 10 percent of this debris could be pulled in by Earth's gravity over the following days, they said. - 'Like a bullet' - Earth's atmosphere would protect the surface from the millimetre- to centimetre-sized lunar rocks, Weigert said. 0.04-2.54 But these meteors could be capable of destroying some satellites -- and there are expected to be a lot more of those orbiting the planet by 2032. "A centimetre-sized rock travelling at tens of thousands of metres per second is a lot like a bullet," Wiegert said. In the days after the impact, there could be more than 1,000 times the normal number of meteors threatening Earth's satellites, he added. Meanwhile, those of us on the ground would be treated to a "spectacular" meteor shower lighting up the night sky, the study said. But the current odds of a direct hit on the near side of the Moon remain at just two percent, Wiegert emphasised. The asteroid is not expected to be visible again until 2028, so the world will have to wait to find out more. If a direct hit is eventually found to be likely, humanity probably has enough time to plan a mission to spare the Moon. "I'm sure it will be considered," Wiegert said. The asteroid is half as wide and has 10 percent of the mass of Dimorphos, which NASA's DART mission smashed into in 2022, successfully changing its trajectory. If 2024 YR4 is on a collision course with the Moon, it would be "a good target" for another test of our planetary defences, Wiegert said. But if not, trying to deflect something zooming so close to Earth could be a little "dangerous", he added. The preprint study, which published on the arXiv database last week, has been submitted to the Astrophysical Journal Letters. dl/gil