Asteroid to brush past Earth within satellite ring today

MONTREAL – An asteroid about half the size of a football field will brush past Earth today and be close enough to be affected by the planet’s gravitational pull.

The giant rock, named Asteroid 2012 DA14, is on a course that will take it over the Indian Ocean at about 2:30 p.m. EST.

And, at an altitude of 27,600 kilometres, it will be close enough to pass inside the ring of satellites that circle the planet.

It all sounds a little too close for comfort, but scientists say Canadians shouldn’t fear a collision.

“We know with absolute certainty it will not impact the Earth on Friday,” said Brown, a scientist at Western University in London, Ont.

“Things of this size get this close to the Earth or closer only about once every 40 years … so it’s an unusual event.“

The asteroid will come so close that the Earth’s gravity will change its orbit, but it won’t be dragged down.

“And we can say that there’s a very low chance _ maybe one chance in 300,000 _ that it will impact (the Earth) in the next 100 years or so,” added Brown.

Brown said the asteroid will be visible by binoculars in areas like Indonesia, eastern Europe, Asia and Australia, although it will be moving very fast.

It will be visible from North America later in the evening but only with high-powered telescopes.

NASA will provide coverage on its website, beginning at about 2 p.m. EST.

A meteor, meanwhile, streaked across the sky above Russia’s Ural Mountains Friday morning, causing sharp explosions and injuring more than 400 people, mostly due to broken glass.

Fragments of the meteor fell in a thinly populated area of the Chelyabinsk region, about 1,500 kilometres east of Moscow.

There was no immediate demonstrable connection between the Russian meteor and today`s asteroid fly-by.

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