Live Science on MSN
Skyscraper-size asteroid previously predicted to hit us in 60 years will zoom past Earth on Thursday (Sept. 18) — and you can see it live
The "potentially hazardous" asteroid 2025 FA22 will fly close past Earth at more than 24,000 mph on Thursday (Sept. 18). The ...
2don MSN
Close call: Building-sized giant asteroid, once feared to hit Earth, will zoom past us today
A building-sized asteroid, 2025 FA22, is set to pass by Earth on September 18, 2025, at a distance of 523,000 miles.
Asteroid 2025 FA22, significantly larger than Delhi's Qutub Minar, will make a close approach to Earth on September 18, 2025.
A fireball over France revealed a tougher kind of asteroid, named 2023 CX1, raising new concerns about how small impacts can ...
Scientists have discovered that microbial life colonised the Lappajarvi impact crater in Finland shortly after a massive ...
In scientific terms, it is normal for some predictions to fail. Not so much in the how, but in the when. A few years ago, some astronomical experts predicted that an asteroid would ...
The Print on MSN
Where not to punch an asteroid hurtling towards Earth & Bronze Age Brits enjoyed potlucks too
ScientiFix, our weekly feature, offers you a summary of the top global science stories of the week, with links to their ...
An asteroid the size of a skyscraper is approaching Earth at a sprightly 24,136 miles per hour—and will be at its closest to us in two days' time. The space rock—dubbed "2025 FA22"—is a sizeable 520 ...
Asteroid deflection could backfire if the impact shoves the rock into a cosmic keyhole, a hidden trapdoor in space.
The Japanese Aerospace Exploration Agency, or JAXA, expects its spacecraft to rendezvous with the asteroid in July 2031. The ...
Space.com on MSN
'God of Chaos' asteroid Apophis will fly by Earth in April 2029 — and these 3 space probes will be watching
A trio of missions are on track to intercept and study the famous near-Earth asteroid Apophis during its close encounter with our planet in April 2029.
Live Science on MSN
'Potentially hazardous' asteroid Ryugu once had 'flowing water' inside it, surprising study claims
A new analysis of asteroid Ryugu hints that the "potentially hazardous" space rock once had flowing water in its core, ...
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