Short description: Hazardous near-Earth asteroid or comet
The asteroid Toutatis is listed as a potentially hazardous near-Earth asteroid, yet poses no immediate threat to Earth. (Radar image taken by GDSCC in 1996.)
A potentially hazardous object (PHO) is a near-Earth object – either an asteroid or a comet – with an orbit that can make close approaches to the Earth and which is large enough to cause significant regional damage in the event of impact.[1] They are conventionally defined as having a minimum orbit intersection distance with Earth of less than 0.05 astronomical units (19.5 lunar distances) and an absolute magnitude of 22 or brighter, the latter of which roughly corresponds to a size larger than 140 meters.[2] More than 99% of the known potentially hazardous objects are no impact threat over the next 100 years.[3](As of September 2022), just 17 of the known potentially hazardous objects listed on the Sentry Risk Table could not be excluded as potential threats over the next hundred years.[4] Over hundreds if not thousands of years though, the orbits of some "potentially hazardous" asteroids can evolve to live up to their namesake.
Most of these objects are potentially hazardous asteroids (PHAs), and a few are comets. (As of November 2022) there are 2,304 known PHAs (about 8% of the total near-Earth population), of which 153 are estimated to be larger than one kilometer in diameter (see list of largest PHAs below).[5][6][lower-alpha 1] Most of the discovered PHAs are Apollo asteroids (1,965) and fewer belong to the group of Aten asteroids (185).[7][8]
A potentially hazardous object can be known not to be a threat to Earth for the next 100 years or more, if its orbit is reasonably well determined. Potentially hazardous asteroids with some threat of impacting Earth in the next 100 years are listed on the Sentry Risk Table. (As of September 2022), only 17 potentially hazardous asteroids are listed on the Sentry Risk Table.[4] Most potentially hazardous asteroids are ruled out as hazardous to at least several hundreds of years when their competing best orbit models are sufficiently constrained, but recent discoveries whose orbital constraints are little-known have divergent or incomplete mechanical models until observation yields further data. After several astronomical surveys, the number of known PHAs has increased tenfold since the end of the 1990s (see bar charts below).[5] The Minor Planet Center's website List of the Potentially Hazardous Asteroids also publishes detailed information for these objects.[9]
In May 2021, NASA astronomers reported that 5 to 10 years of preparation may be needed to avoid a potential impactor, as most recently based on a simulated exercise conducted by the 2021 Planetary Defense Conference.[10][11][12]
Contents
1Overview
1.1Levels of hazard
1.2Potentially hazardous comet
1.3Numbers
1.4Size
2Largest PHAs
2.1Statistics
3Gallery
4See also
5Notes
6References
7External links
7.1Minor Planet Center
Overview
Plot of orbits of known potentially hazardous asteroids, with sizes over 140 metres (460 ft) and that pass within 7.6 million kilometres (4.7×10^6 mi) of Earth's orbit. Epoch as of early 2013.
An object is considered a PHO if its minimum orbit intersection distance (MOID) with respect to Earth is less than 0.05 astronomical unit|AU (7,500,000 km; 4,600,000 mi) – approximately 19.5 lunar distances – and its absolute magnitude is brighter than 22, approximately corresponding to a diameter above 140 meters (460 ft).[1][2] This is big enough to cause regional devastation to human settlements unprecedented in human history in the case of a land impact, or a major tsunami in the case of an ocean impact. Such impact events occur on average around once per 10,000 years. NEOWISE data estimates that there are 4,700 ± 1,500 potentially hazardous asteroids with a diameter greater than 100 meters.[13]
Levels of hazard
Main pages: Astronomy:Torino scale and Palermo Technical Impact Hazard Scale
The two main scales used to categorize the impact hazards of asteroids are the Palermo Technical Impact Hazard Scale and the Torino scale.
Potentially hazardous comet
A potentially hazardous comet (PHC) is a short-period comet which currently has an Earth-MOID less than 0.05 AU. Known PHCs include: 109P/Swift-Tuttle, 55P/Tempel–Tuttle, 15P/Finlay, 289P/Blanpain, 255P/Levy, 206P/Barnard–Boattini, 21P/Giacobini–Zinner, and 73P/Schwassmann–Wachmann.
Numbers
Detected NEAs by various projects. The broader class of NEAs includes all PHAs as a subset.[5]
LINEAR NEAT Spacewatch LONEOS CSS
Pan-STARRS NEOWISE ATLAS Others
In 2012 NASA estimated 20 to 30 percent of these objects have been found.[13] During an asteroid's close approaches to planets or moons other than the Earth, it will be subject to gravitational perturbation, modifying its orbit, and potentially changing a previously non-threatening asteroid into a PHA or vice versa. This is a reflection of the dynamic character of the Solar System.
Several astronomical survey projects such as Lincoln Near-Earth Asteroid Research, Catalina Sky Survey and Pan-STARRS continue to search for more PHOs. Each one found is studied by various means, including optical, radar, and infrared to determine its characteristics, such as size, composition, rotation state, and to more accurately determine its orbit. Both professional and amateur astronomers participate in such observation and tracking.
Size
Asteroids larger than approximately 35 meters across can pose a threat to a town or city.[14] However the diameter of most small asteroids is not well determined, as it is usually only estimated based on their brightness and distance, rather than directly measured, e.g. from radar observations. For this reason NASA and the Jet Propulsion Laboratory use the more practical measure of absolute magnitude (H). Any asteroid with an absolute magnitude of 22.0 or brighter is assumed to be of the required size.[2]
Only a coarse estimation of size can be found from the object's magnitude because an assumption must be made for its albedo which is also not usually known for certain. The NASA near-Earth object program uses an assumed albedo of 0.14 for this purpose. In May 2016, the asteroid size estimates arising from the Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer and NEOWISE missions have been questioned.[15][16][17] Although the early original criticism had not undergone peer review,[18] a more recent peer-reviewed study was subsequently published.[19][20]
Largest PHAs
With a mean diameter of approximately 7 kilometers, Apollo asteroid (53319) 1999 JM8 is likely the largest known potentially hazardous object, despite its fainter absolute magnitude of 15.2, compared to other listed objects in the table below (note: calculated mean-diameters in table are inferred from the object's brightness and its (assumed) albedo. They are only an approximation.). The lowest numbered PHA is 1566 Icarus.[9]
Brightest Potentially Hazardous Asteroids [9]
Designation
Discovery
(H) (mag)
D (km)
Orbital description
Remarks
Refs
Year
Place
Discoverer
Class
a (AU)
e
i (°)
q (AU)
Q (AU)
MOID (AU)
(4953) 1990 MU
1990
413
R. H. McNaught
14.1
3 km
APO
1.621
0.658
24.4
0.555
2.687
0.02640
—
MPC · JPL · catalog
3122 Florence
1981
413
S. J. Bus
14.1
5 km
AMO
1.769
0.423
22.2
1.020
2.518
0.04430
—
MPC · JPL · catalog
(16960) 1998 QS52
1998
704
LINEAR
14.3
4 km
APO
2.203
0.858
17.5
0.313
4.093
0.01443
—
MPC · JPL · catalog
4183 Cuno
1959
074
C. Hoffmeister
14.4
4 km
APO
1.982
0.634
6.7
0.725
3.240
0.02825
—
MPC · JPL · catalog
3200 Phaethon
1983
500
IRAS
14.6
5.8 km
APO
1.271
0.890
22.3
0.140
2.402
0.01945
—
MPC · JPL · catalog
(242450) 2004 QY2
2004
E12
Siding Spring Survey
14.7
3 km
APO
1.084
0.477
37.0
0.567
1.601
0.04686
—
MPC · JPL · catalog
(89830) 2002 CE
2002
704
LINEAR
14.9
3.1 km
AMO
2.077
0.507
43.7
1.023
3.131
0.02767
—
MPC · JPL · catalog
(137427) 1999 TF211
1999
704
LINEAR
15.1
2.9 km
APO
2.448
0.610
39.2
0.955
3.942
0.01787
—
MPC · JPL · catalog
(111253) 2001 XU10
2001
704
LINEAR
15.2
3 km
APO
1.754
0.439
42.0
0.983
2.524
0.02934
—
MPC · JPL · catalog
(53319) 1999 JM8
1999
704
LINEAR
15.2
7 km
APO
2.726
0.641
13.8
0.978
4.474
0.02346
likely largest PHO
MPC · JPL · catalog
1981 Midas
1973
675
C. T. Kowal
15.2
2 km
APO
1.776
0.650
39.8
0.621
2.931
0.00449
—
MPC · JPL · catalog
2201 Oljato
1947
690
H. L. Giclas
15.25
2.1 km
APO
2.175
0.713
2.5
0.624
3.726
0.00305
—
MPC · JPL · catalog
(90075) 2002 VU94
2002
644
NEAT
15.3
2.2 km
APO
2.134
0.576
8.9
0.904
3.363
0.03010
—
MPC · JPL · catalog
4179 Toutatis
1989
010
C. Pollas
15.30
2.5 km
APO
2.536
0.629
0.4
0.940
4.132
0.00615
—
MPC · JPL · catalog
(159857) 2004 LJ1
2004
704
LINEAR
15.4
3 km
APO
2.264
0.593
23.1
0.920
3.607
0.01682
—
MPC · JPL · catalog
(85713) 1998 SS49
1998
704
LINEAR
15.6
3.5 km
APO
1.924
0.639
10.8
0.694
3.154
0.00234
—
MPC · JPL · catalog
4486 Mithra
1987
071
E. W. Elst V. G. Shkodrov
15.6
2 km
APO
2.200
0.663
3.0
0.742
3.658
0.04626
—
MPC · JPL · catalog
1620 Geographos
1951
675
A. G. Wilson R. Minkowski
15.60
2.5 km
APO
1.245
0.335
13.3
0.828
1.663
0.03007
—
MPC · JPL · catalog
(415029) 2011 UL21
2011
703
CSS
15.7
2.5 km
APO
2.122
0.653
34.9
0.736
3.509
0.01925
—
MPC · JPL · catalog
(242216) 2003 RN10
2003
699
LONEOS
15.7
2.5 km
AMO
2.231
0.541
39.6
1.024
3.438
0.00956
—
MPC · JPL · catalog
12923 Zephyr
1999
699
LONEOS
15.8
2 km
APO
1.962
0.492
5.3
0.996
2.927
0.02115
—
MPC · JPL · catalog
(52768) 1998 OR2
1998
566
NEAT
15.8
2 km
APO
2.380
0.573
5.9
1.017
3.743
0.01573
—
MPC · JPL · catalog
Statistics
Below is a list of the largest PHAs (based on absolute magnitude H) discovered in a given year. Historical data of the cumulative number of discovered PHA since 1999 are displayed in the bar charts—one for the total number and the other for objects larger than one kilometer.[5] PHAs brighter than absolute magnitude 17.75 are likely larger than 1 km in size.
Brightest PHA discoveries of each calendar year since 1989 [9]
Number
Name
Year
(H)
Refs
4179
Toutatis
1989
15.3
MPC · JPL · catalog
4953
1990 MU
1990
14.9
MPC · JPL · catalog
7341
1991 VH
1991
17.0
MPC · JPL · catalog
10115
1992 SK
1992
17.2
MPC · JPL · catalog
39572
1993 DQ1
1993
16.6
MPC · JPL · catalog
7482
1994 PC1
1994
16.7
MPC · JPL · catalog
243566
1995 SA
1995
17.4
MPC · JPL · catalog
8566
1996 EN
1996
16.3
MPC · JPL · catalog
35396
1997 XF11
1997
17.0
MPC · JPL · catalog
16960
1998 QS52
1998
14.4
MPC · JPL · catalog
137427
1999 TF211
1999
15.3
MPC · JPL · catalog
138095
2000 DK79
2000
16.0
MPC · JPL · catalog
111253
2001 XU10
2001
15.3
MPC · JPL · catalog
89830
2002 CE
2002
15.0
MPC · JPL · catalog
242216
2003 RN10
2003
15.7
MPC · JPL · catalog
242450
2004 QY2
2004
14.6
MPC · JPL · catalog
308242
2005 GO21
2005
16.3
MPC · JPL · catalog
374851
2006 VV2
2006
16.7
MPC · JPL · catalog
214869
2007 PA8
2007
16.5
MPC · JPL · catalog
294739
2008 CM
2008
17.1
MPC · JPL · catalog
523630
2009 OG
2009
16.2
MPC · JPL · catalog
458122
2010 EW45
2010
17.6
MPC · JPL · catalog
415029
2011 UL21
2011
15.9
MPC · JPL · catalog
–
2012 HJ1
2012
17.9
MPC · JPL · —
507716
2013 UP8
2013
16.4
MPC · JPL · catalog
533671
2014 LJ21
2014
16.1
MPC · JPL · catalog
–
2015 HY116
2015
17.6
MPC · JPL · —
–
2016 CB194
2016
17.6
MPC · JPL · —
–
2017 CH1
2017
17.9
MPC · JPL · —
–
2018 XV5
2018
17.7
MPC · JPL · —
–
2019 RU3
2019
18.1
MPC · JPL · —
–
2020 SL1
2020
17.7
MPC · JPL · —
–
2021 HK12
2021
17.7
MPC · JPL · —
–
2022 AP7
2022
17.3
MPC · JPL · —
Script error: No such module "Chart".
PHA-KM: potentially hazardous asteroids larger than 1 kilometer since 1999 – Cumulative number of discovered PHA by end of year (first of December). As of September 2020, there are 157 known PHAs larger than one kilometer.[5]
Script error: No such module "Chart".
PHA: total number of potentially hazardous asteroids since 1999 – Cumulative number of all discovered PHA by end of year (first of December). As of September 2020, there are 2115 PHAs.[5]
Gallery
Radar image of the 350-meter PHO (308635) 2005 YU55
See also
Asteroid impact avoidance
Earth-grazing fireball
Global catastrophic risk
List of asteroid close approaches to Earth
Astronomy:Sentry (monitoring system) – JPL program to monitor the Minor Planet Center's catalog for Earth impacts
Astronomy:Spaceguard – Efforts to study asteroids that might impact Earth
Notes
↑An object's calculated mean-diameter is only a rough estimate. It is inferred from the object's varying brightness—observed and measured at various times—and the assumed, yet often unknown reflectivity of its surface. NASA's Asteroid Size Estimator is a tool for a generic absolute magnitude-to-diameter conversion for an assumed geometric albedo.
References
↑ 1.01.1Task Force on potentially hazardous Near Earth Objects (September 2000). Report of the Task Force on potentially hazardous Near Earth Objects. http://www.nss.org/resources/library/planetarydefense/2000-ReportOfTheTaskForceOnPotentiallyHazardousNearEarthObjects-UK.pdf. Retrieved 22 January 2018.
↑"Unusual Minor Planets – Overview". Minor Planet Center. https://minorplanetcenter.net/iau/lists/Unusual.html.
↑"JPL Small-Body Database Search Engine: PHAs and orbital class (APO)". JPL Solar System Dynamics. https://ssd.jpl.nasa.gov/sbdb_query.cgi?obj_group=pha;obj_kind=all;obj_numbered=all;ast_orbit_class=APO;OBJ_field=0;ORB_field=0;table_format=HTML;max_rows=100;format_option=comp;c_fields=AcBhBgBjBiBnBsCjCpAi;.cgifields=format_option;.cgifields=obj_kind;.cgifields=obj_group;.cgifields=obj_numbered;.cgifields=ast_orbit_class;.cgifields=table_format;.cgifields=com_orbit_class&query=1&c_sort=AcA.
↑"JPL Small-Body Database Search Engine: PHAs and orbital class (ATE)". JPL Solar System Dynamics. https://ssd.jpl.nasa.gov/sbdb_query.cgi?obj_group=pha;obj_kind=all;obj_numbered=all;ast_orbit_class=ATE;OBJ_field=0;ORB_field=0;table_format=HTML;max_rows=100;format_option=comp;c_fields=AcBhBgBjBiBnBsCjCpAi;.cgifields=format_option;.cgifields=obj_kind;.cgifields=obj_group;.cgifields=obj_numbered;.cgifields=ast_orbit_class;.cgifields=table_format;.cgifields=com_orbit_class&query=1&c_sort=AcA.
↑ 9.09.19.29.3"List of the Potentially Hazardous Asteroids (PHAs)". Minor Planet Center. https://www.minorplanetcenter.net/iau/lists/t_phas.html.
↑McFall-Johnsen, Morgan; Woodward, Aylin (12 May 2021). "A NASA simulation revealed that 6 months' warning isn't enough to stop an asteroid from hitting Earth. We'd need 5 to 10 years.". Business Insider. https://www.businessinsider.com/nasa-asteroid-simulation-reveals-need-years-of-warning-2021-5. Retrieved 14 May 2021.
↑Bartels, Meghan (1 May 2021). "How did you spend your week? NASA pretended to crash an asteroid into Earth.". Space.com. https://www.space.com/planetary-defense-asteroid-impact-scenario-exercise-2021. Retrieved 14 May 2021.
↑Chodas, Paul; Khudikyan, Shakeh; Chamberlin, Alan (30 April 2021). "Planetary Defense Conference Exercise - 2021 Planetary Defense Conference (virtually) in Vienna, Austria, April 26–April 30, 2021.". NASA. https://cneos.jpl.nasa.gov/pd/cs/pdc21/. Retrieved 14 May 2021.
↑ 13.013.1"NASA news – NASA Survey Counts Potentially Hazardous Asteroids". NASA/JPL. 16 May 2012. https://www.jpl.nasa.gov/news/news.php?release=2012-138.
↑Will Ferguson (22 January 2013). "Asteroid Hunter Gives an Update on the Threat of Near-Earth Objects". Scientific American. https://blogs.scientificamerican.com/observations/asteroid-hunter-gives-an-update-on-the-threat-of-near-earth-objects/. Retrieved 2013-01-23.
↑Chang, Kenneth (23 May 2016). "How Big Are Those Killer Asteroids? A Critic Says NASA Doesn't Know.". New York Times. https://www.nytimes.com/2016/05/24/science/asteroids-nathan-myhrvold-nasa.html.
↑Myhrvold, Nathan (23 May 2016). "Asteroid thermal modeling in the presence of reflected sunlight with an application to WISE/NEOWISE observational data". arXiv:1605.06490v2 [astro-ph.EP].
↑Billings, Lee (27 May 2016). "For Asteroid-Hunting Astronomers, Nathan Myhrvold Says the Sky Is Falling". Scientific American. http://www.scientificamerican.com/article/for-asteroid-hunting-astronomers-nathan-myhrvold-says-the-sky-is-falling1/.
↑NASA Administrator (25 May 2016). "NASA Response to Recent Paper on NEOWISE Asteroid Size Results". NASA. https://www.nasa.gov/feature/nasa-response-to-recent-paper-on-neowise-asteroid-size-results.
↑Myhrvold, Nathan (2018). "An empirical examination of WISE/NEOWISE asteroid analysis and results". Icarus314: 64–97. doi:10.1016/j.icarus.2018.05.004. Bibcode: 2018Icar..314...64M.
↑Chang, Kenneth (14 June 2018). "Asteroids and Adversaries: Challenging What NASA Knows About Space Rocks - Two years ago, NASA dismissed and mocked an amateur's criticisms of its asteroids database. Now Nathan Myhrvold is back, and his papers have passed peer review.". The New York Times. https://www.nytimes.com/2018/06/14/science/asteroids-nasa-nathan-myhrvold.html.
Very Close Approaches (<0.01 AU) of PHAs to Earth 1900-2200
TECA Table of Asteroids Next Closest Approaches to the Earth, Sormano Astronomical Observatory
MBPL - Minor Body Priority List (PHA Asteroids), Sormano Astronomical Observatory
Responding to the Threat of Potentially-Hazardous Near Earth Objects (PDF)
Risk of comet hitting Earth is greater than previously thought, say researchers, The Guardian, 22 December 2015
Conversion of Absolute Magnitude to Diameter, Minor Planet Center
Minor Planet Center
List of the Potentially Hazardous Asteroids (PHAs)
Asteroid Hazards, Part 2: The Challenge of Detection on YouTube (min. 7:14)
Asteroid Hazards, Part 3: Finding the Path on YouTube (min. 5:38)
v
t
e
Natural disasters · list by death toll
Geological
Mass wasting
Landslide
Avalanche
Mudflow
Debris flow
Lahar
Earthquake (List)
Seismic hazard
Seismic risk
Soil liquefaction
Volcano eruption
Pyroclastic flow
Volcanic ash
Natural erosion
Sinkhole
Hydrological
Flood (List)
Coastal flood
Flash flood
Storm surge
Other
Tsunami
Megatsunami
Limnic eruption
Meteorological
Temperature
Cold wave
Ice storm
Hail
Heat wave
Drought
Megadrought
Cyclonic storms
Hurricane
Thunderstorm
Tornado
Tropical cyclone
Typhoon
Other
Wildfire
Firestorm
Space
Potentially hazardous object
Impact event
Meteor shower
Geomagnetic storm
Solar flare
v
t
e
Small Solar System bodies
Minor planets
Designation
Groups
List
Moon
Meanings of names
Asteroid
Aten asteroid
Asteroid belt
Family
Jupiter trojan
Near-Earth
Spectral types
Distant minor planet
Centaur
Damocloid
Neptune trojan
Trans-Neptunian object
Detached
Kuiper belt
Oort cloud
Scattered disc
Comets
Extinct
Great
Halley-type
Hyperbolic
Long-period
Lost
Main-belt
Near-parabolic
Periodic
Sungrazing
Other
Meteoroids
v
t
e
Solar System
Sun
Mercury
Venus
Earth
Mars
Ceres
Jupiter
Saturn
Uranus
Neptune
Pluto
Haumea
Makemake
Eris
Planets
Terrestrial planets
Mercury
Venus
Earth
Mars
Giant planets
Jupiter
Saturn
Uranus
Neptune
Dwarf planets
Ceres
Pluto
Haumea
Makemake
Eris
Rings
Jovian
Saturnian (Rhean)
Charikloan
Chironean
Uranian
Neptunian
Haumean
Moons
Terrestrial
Moon
other near-Earth objects
Martian
Phobos
Deimos
Jovian
Ganymede
Callisto
Io
Europa
all 79
Saturnian
Titan
Rhea
Iapetus
Dione
Tethys
Enceladus
Mimas
Hyperion
Phoebe
all 82
Uranian
Titania
Oberon
Umbriel
Ariel
Miranda
all 27
Neptunian
Triton
Proteus
Nereid
all 14
Plutonian
Charon
Nix
Hydra
Kerberos
Styx
Eridian
Dysnomia
Haumean
Hiʻiaka
Namaka
Makemakean
S/2015 (136472) 1
Exploration (outline)
Colonization
Discovery
astronomy
historical models
timeline
Human spaceflight
space stations
list
Space probes
timeline
list
Mercury
Venus
Moon
mining
Mars
Ceres
Asteroids
mining
Comets
Jupiter
Saturn
Uranus
Neptune
Pluto
Deep space
Hypothetical objects
Fifth giant
Nemesis
Phaeton
Planet Nine
Planet V
Planet X
Theia
Tyche
Vulcan
Vulcanoids
Subsatellites
Lists
Comets
Dwarf planets (possible)
Gravitationally rounded objects
Minor planets
names
Natural satellites
Solar System models
Solar System objects
by size
by discovery date
Small Solar System bodies
Comets
Damocloids
Meteoroids
Minor planets
moons
Planetesimal
Mercury-crossers
Venus-crossers
Venus trojans
Near-Earth objects
Earth-crossers
Earth trojans
Mars-crossers
Mars trojans
Asteroid belt
Asteroids
Ceres
Pallas
Juno
Vesta
first 1000
families
exceptional
Kirkwood gap
Main-belt comets
Jupiter-crossers
Jupiter trojans
Centaurs
Saturn-crossers
Uranus-crossers
Uranus trojans
Neptune-crossers
Neptune trojans
Cis-Neptunian objects
Trans-Neptunian objects
Plutoids
Kuiper belt
Cubewanos
Plutinos
Detached objects
Hills cloud
Oort cloud
Scattered disc
Sednoids
Formation and evolution
Accretion
Accretion disk
Asteroid belt
Circumplanetary disk
Circumstellar disc
Circumstellar envelope
Cosmic dust
Debris disk
Detached object
Disrupted planet
Excretion disk
Exoplanetary Circumstellar Environments and Disk Explorer
Exozodiacal dust
Extraterrestrial materials
Extraterrestrial sample curation
Giant-impact hypothesis
Gravitational collapse
Hills cloud
Interplanetary dust cloud
Interplanetary medium
Interplanetary space
Interstellar cloud
Interstellar dust
Interstellar medium
Interstellar space
Kuiper belt
List of interstellar and circumstellar molecules
Merging stars
Molecular cloud
Nebular hypothesis
Oort cloud
Outer space
Planetary migration
Planetary system
Planetesimal
Planet formation
Protoplanetary disk
Ring system
Rubble pile
Sample-return mission
Scattered disc
Star formation
Outline of the Solar System
Solar System → Local Interstellar Cloud → Local Bubble → Gould Belt → Orion Arm → Milky Way → Milky Way subgroup → Local Group → Local Sheet → Virgo Supercluster → Laniakea Supercluster → Observable universe → Universe Each arrow (→) may be read as "within" or "part of".
v
t
e
Modern impact events
On Earth
Pre-2000
1490 Ch'ing-yang
1783 Great Meteor
1860 Great Meteor
1896 Madrid Meteor
1908 Tunguska
1913 Great Meteor Procession
1930 Curuçá River
1938 Chicora meteor
1947 Sikhote-Alin meteorite
1969 Murchison meteorite
1972 Great Daylight Fireball
1990 Earth-grazing meteoroid
Post-2000
2002 Eastern Mediterranean
2002 Vitim
2007 Carancas
2008 TC3 impact
2008 Buzzard Coulee meteorite
2009 Sulawesi superbolide
2012 Sutter's Mill meteorite
2012 UK meteoroid
2012 Novato meteorite
2013 Chelyabinsk meteor
Chelyabinsk meteorite
2014 AA impact
2014 Ontario fireball
2015 Kerala meteorite
2015 Thailand bolide
WT1190F impact
2017 China bolide
2018 LA impact
2018 Kamchatka meteor
2019 MO impact
On Jupiter
1994 Comet Shoemaker–Levy 9
2009 Jupiter impact
2010 Jupiter impact
Lists
Asteroid close approaches to Earth
Comets
Bolides
Meteor air bursts
Meteorite falls
Minor planets
crossing Earth's orbit
See also
Asteroid impact prediction
Asteroid impact avoidance
Bolide
Earth-grazing fireball
Meteor procession
Meteor shower
Meteorite
Meteoroid
Near-Earth object
Potentially hazardous object
v
t
e
Impact cratering on Earth
Impact crater
Impact event
Lists
Worldwide
Africa
Antarctica
Asia
Australia
Europe
North America
South America
By country
Confirmed≥20 km diameter
Acraman
Amelia Creek
Araguainha
Beaverhead
Boltysh
Carswell
Charlevoix
Chesapeake Bay
Chicxulub
Clearwater East & West
Gosses Bluff
Haughton
Kamensk
Kara
Karakul
Keurusselkä
Lappajärvi
Logancha
Manicouagan
Manson
Mistastin
Mjølnir
Montagnais
Morokweng
Nördlinger Ries
Obolon'
Popigai
Presqu'île
Puchezh-Katunki
Rochechouart
Saint Martin
Shoemaker
Siljan Ring
Slate Islands
Steen River
Strangways
Sudbury
Tookoonooka
Tunnunik
Vredefort
Woodleigh
Yarrabubba
Topics
Alvarez hypothesis
Australite
Breccia
Coesite
Complex crater
Cretaceous–Paleogene boundary
Cryptoexplosion
Ejecta blanket
Impact crater
Impact structure
Impactite
Late Heavy Bombardment
Lechatelierite
Meteorite
Moldavite
Ordovician meteor event
Philippinite
Planar deformation features
Shatter cone
Shock metamorphism
Shocked quartz
Stishovite
Suevite
Tektite
Research
Baldwin, Ralph Belknap
Barringer, Daniel
Barringer Medal
Chao, Edward C T
Dietz, Robert S
Hartmann, William K
Melosh, H Jay
Ryder, Graham
Schultz, Peter H
Shoemaker, Eugene
Earth Impact Database
Impact Field Studies Group
Lunar and Planetary Institute
Traces of Catastrophe
v
t
e
Planetary defense
Main topics
Asteroid
Bolide
Earth-grazing fireball
Impact event
List of meteor air bursts
Meteor procession
Meteor shower
Meteorite
Meteoroid
Near-Earth object
Potentially hazardous object
Defense
Asteroid impact avoidance
Asteroid laser ablation
Gravity tractor
Ion-beam shepherd
Asteroid close approaches
Earth-crossing minor planets
Damage scales
Palermo scale
Torino scale
Space probes
Dawn
Deep Impact
AIDA
Hera
DART
Halley Armada
Hayabusa
Hayabusa2
MASCOT
NEAR Shoemaker
NEA Scout
New Horizons
OSIRIS-REx
PROCYON
Rosetta
Philae
Stardust
NEO tracking
ATLAS
Catalina Sky Survey
LINEAR
LONEOS
NEAT
NEOSSat
NEOCam
NEODyS
OGS Telescope
Orbit@home
Pan-STARRS
SCAP
Sentinel Space Telescope
Sentry
Spacewatch
WISE
Organizations
B612 Foundation
Japan Spaceguard Association
Meteoritical Society
NEOShield
Spaceguard
The Spaceguard Foundation
Space Situational Awareness Programme
Planetary Defense Coordination Office
Potential threats
1950 DA
1994 WR12
101955 Bennu
2002 MN
(410777) 2009 FD
2010 RF12
99942 Apophis
Films / video
The End of the World (1916)
When Worlds Collide (1951)
Gorath (1962)
The Green Slime (1968)
The Paradise Syndrome (1968)
A Fire in the Sky (1978)
Meteor (1979)
NOVA: Doomsday Asteroid (1995)
Asteroid (1997)
Deep Impact (1998)
Armageddon (1998)
Judgment Day (1999)
Post Impact (2004)
Deadly Skies (2006)
Super Comet: After the Impact (2007)
Impact (2009)
NOVA: Last Extinction (2009)
Meteor Storm (2010)
HORIZON: Asteroids–The Good, the Bad and the Ugly (2010)
Melancholia (2011)
NOVA: Meteor Strike (2013)
NOVA: Asteroid: Doomsday or Payday? (2013)
Impact Earth (2015)
Avengers: Age of Ultron (2015)
v
t
e
Global catastrophic risks
Future of the Earth
Ultimate fate of the universe
Technological
Gray goo
Kinetic bombardment
Mutual assured destruction
Dead Hand
Doomsday device
Antimatter weapon
Synthetic intelligence / Artificial intelligence
Existential risk from artificial intelligence
AI takeover
Technological singularity
Transhumanism
Year 2000 problem
Sociological
Malthusian catastrophe
New World Order (conspiracy theory)
Nuclear holocaust
winter
famine
cobalt
Societal collapse
World War III
Ecological
Climate change
Extinction risk from global warming
Tipping points in the climate system
Global terrestrial stilling
Global warming
Hypercane
Ice age
Ecocide
Human impact on the environment
Ozone depletion
Cascade effect
Supervolcano
winter
Earth Overshoot Day
Overexploitation
Overpopulation
Human overpopulation
Biological
Extinction
Extinction event
Human extinction
Genetic erosion
Genetic pollution
Others
Dysgenics
Pandemic
Biological agent
Transhumanism
Astronomical
Big Crunch
Big Rip
Coronal mass ejection
Gamma-ray burst
Impact event
Asteroid impact avoidance
Potentially hazardous object
Near-Earth supernova
Solar flare
Stellar collision
Mythological
Eschatology
Buddhist
Hindu
Last Judgment
Christian
Book of Revelation
Islamic
Jewish
Norse
Zoroastrian
Others
2011 end times prediction
2012 phenomenon
Apocalypse
Armageddon
Blood moon prophecy
Doomsday Clock
End time
List of dates predicted for apocalyptic events
Nibiru cataclysm
Rapture
Revelation 12 sign prophecy
Third Temple
Fictional
Alien invasion
Apocalyptic and post-apocalyptic fiction
List of apocalyptic and post-apocalyptic fiction
List of apocalyptic films
Climate fiction
Disaster films
List of disaster films
List of fictional doomsday devices
Zombie apocalypse
Categories
Apocalypticism
Future problems
Hazards
Risk analysis
Doomsday scenarios
0.00
(0 votes)
Original source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Potentially hazardous object. Read more