NASA head issues meteor warning, calls for cooperation to meet threat

OSIRIS-REx captured this view of asteroid Bennu on Oct. 29, 2018, from a distance of about 205 miles. Bennu is classified as a “potentially hazardous” asteroid because there’s a one-in-2,700-chance that it will collide with Earth in the 22nd century.NASA
April 30, 2019, 8:09 AM PDT / Source: CNBC.com
By Chloe Taylor, CNBC
Meteors that could destroy an entire U.S. state are a real threat to Earth, NASA’s chief warned on Monday.

Speaking at the Planetary Defense Conference in Washington, D.C., NASA Administrator Jim Bridenstine warned that the risk posed by meteor crashes was not being taken seriously.

“This is not about Hollywood, this is not about movies, this is about ultimately protecting the only planet we know right now to host life,” he said.

Bridenstine pointed to the meteorite that exploded over the Russian city of Chelyabinsk in 2013, which had “30 times the energy of the atomic bomb at Hiroshima” and injured around 1,500 people. Just 16 hours after the crash, NASA detected an even larger object that approached the earth but did not land on it, he revealed.

Image: NASA Administrator Jim Bridenstine at the Planetary Defense Conference at the University of Maryland on April 29, 2019.
NASA Administrator Jim Bridenstine at the Planetary Defense Conference at the University of Maryland on April 29, 2019.Joel Kowsky / NASA
“I wish I could tell you that these events are exceptionally unique, but they are not,” Bridenstine said. “These events are not rare — they happen. It’s up to us to make sure that we are characterizing, detecting, tracking all of the near-Earth objects that could be a threat to the world.”

According to scientific modeling systems, such events are expected to happen once every 60 years — but Bridenstine pointed out that destructive meteorites had crashed on the earth three times in the last century.

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