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*Do You Think We Should Take The Threat Of An Astroid Destroying Our Planet Serious?

Today is International Asteroid Day!

Why Asteroid Day?

In December 2016 the United Nations General Assembly adopted resolution A/RES/71/90, declaring 30 June International Asteroid Day in order to "observe each year at the international level the anniversary of the Tunguska impact over Siberia, Russian Federation, on 30 June 1908, and to raise public awareness about the asteroid impact hazard."

International Asteroid Day aims to raise public awareness about the asteroid impact hazard and to inform the public about the crisis communication actions to be taken at the global level in case of a credible near-Earth object threat.

Background

Near-Earth objects (NEOs) represent potentially catastrophic threats to our planet.

NEO is an asteroid or comet, which passes close to the Earth's orbit.

According to NASA’s Center for NEO Studies, there are over 16 000 Near Earth Asteroids discovered.

The Tunguska asteroid event in Siberia, Russian Federation, on 30 June 1908, was the Earth's largest asteroid impact in recorded history.

On 15 February 2013, a large fireball (technically, called a "superbolide"), traveling at a velocity of 18.6 kilometers per second, entered the atmosphere and disintegrated in the skies over Chelyabinsk. According to NASA, the approximate effective diameter of the asteroid was estimated at 18 meters and its mass at 11,000 tons.

The approximate total impact energy of the Chelyabinsk Fireball, in kilotons of TNT explosives (the energy parameter usually quoted for a fireball), was 440 kilotons.

The Chelyabinsk event was an extraordinarily large fireball, the most energetic impact event recognized since the 1908 Tunguska blast in Russian Siberia.

The United Nations Office for Outer Space Affairs (UNOOSA) has worked on NEOs for many years, recognising a NEO impact hazard as a global issue demanding an international response.

Addressing such a hazard, including the identification of those objects that pose a threat of impact and planning a corresponding mitigation campaign, requires cooperative action in the interest of public safety on the part of the global community.

Building on recommendations for an international response to a near-Earth Object impact threat, endorsed by the Committee on the Peaceful Uses of Outer Space (COPUOS) in 2013, the International Asteroid Warning Network (IAWN) and the Space Mission Planning Advisory Group (SMPAG) were established in 2014.

The International Asteroid Warning Network (IAWN) uses well-defined communication plans and protocols to assist Governments in the analysis of possible consequences of an asteroid impact and to support the planning of mitigation responses.

The Space Mission Planning Advisory Group (SMPAG) is an inter-space agency forum that identifies technologies needed for near-Earth Object deflection, and aims to build consensus on recommendations for planetary defense measures.

Source: www.un.org/en/observances/asteroid-day

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Let's Protect Our Beautiful Planet!

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Asteroid day is fake. Do you really think they know what day we will be hit by an asteroid? They are just guessing. That's the problem with fake authorities like scientists and the UN they pretend to know things that they don't. Do your own research.
@chessfan124 said in #2:
> Asteroid day is fake. Do you really think they know what day we will be hit by an asteroid? They are just guessing. That's the problem with fake authorities like scientists and the UN they pretend to know things that they don't. Do your own research.

It's an anniversary (the 115th) of a historical event, not any prediction for the future which is of course impossible. It's a day set aside to reflect on the issue.

While I was growing up in the 1970s I learned about the Tunguska event as an explosion of mysterious and unknown origin. It is only in the last few decades that the true nature of that event has been established and that the threat of collision from NEOs has been recognised.

Fortunately the objects large enough to threaten civilisation in stable orbits close by in the solar system have been identified in recent years and are being constantly monitored. Any of those found to be on a (possible) collision course should hopefully be detected in time for us to attempt to deflect them. The first successful trial deflection (by controlled impact) of a non-threatening asteroid (a satellite of another asteroid) was carried out last year.

Unfortunately we are powerless against long period objects like comets which approach on a collision course from outside the inner solar system. But the chance of that occurring in our lifetimes is remote.
I think we should have an International Rescue day.

Somewhere there’s a catastrophe happening.. the OP should dial International Rescue. Thunderbirds are go!

Other International days for the OP to consider....

Bacon sandwich day- bacon sandwiches are the best
Sausage sandwich day - sausage sandwiches are very underrated
Egg sandwich day - could lead to an increase in methane and be harmful for the planet
Sandcastle day - everyone go to the beach for a fun day building sandcastles
The Sun is getting bigger day - a definite cause of the earth warming up and killing us all but not in the next 6 years
Invent an International Day, day.. - it’s obvious this one.
Don’t take a shower or have a bath day - save water and help the planet.

Add your favourite International Day, day, to the list.
The asteroid event that ended dinosaurs
was technically the highest ratio of killing birds to one stone
Technology has been demonstrated, on a small scale to be effective at deflecting impactors. It would be wise to scale it up.
@chessfan124 said in #2:
> Do you really think they know what day we will be hit by an asteroid? They are just guessing. That's the problem with fake authorities like scientists and the UN they pretend to know things that they don't. Do your own research.
In this age of technology, there's no scope of guessing. With such advancements in field of astronomy, it is possible to know approximate date as to when asteroid will be closest to earth and at which speed will it come by and would it land on earth or not. Thank God you aren't one of those scientists. Else, you would leave us by saying 'do your own research' when you are supposed to do it!

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