NASA rules out asteroid collision with Mars

By DPA

Washington : Scientists have drastically reduced the chances of a 50-metre-wide asteroid striking Mars later this month, saying the rock will likely keep a distance of about 26,000 km.


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The US space agency NASA said Thursday it was “effectively ruling out” a collision, reducing the probability to 1 in 10,000. Ten days ago the odds stood at 1 in 25 – nearly 4 percent.

The 2007 WD5 asteroid, discovered late November 2007, resembles in its dimensions one that exploded over Siberia in 1908, destroying 80 million trees over an area of nearly 2,200 square km. It is expected to pass Mars on Jan 30.

Scientists said it was natural for the probability of an impact to increase dramatically before all uncertainty is eliminated, but 1 in 25 was still an unusually large chance.

Steve Chesley, a scientist at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, California, said astronomers rarely had to deal with odds greater than 1 in a million.

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