Over a million space rocks could strike Earth with more energy than a nuclear bomb, and we don't know where most of them are

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Over a million space rocks could strike Earth with more energy than a nuclear bomb, and we don't know where most of them are

Earth

REUTERS/NASA/Handout

Our home planet is a moving target for asteroids. NASA wants to find them before it's too late.

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  • NASA wants to find killer asteroids before they smack into the planet.
  • There are over a million potentially city-killing asteroids lurking beyond the edges of our sensory equipment, and we've only identified about a third of them.
  • Asteroids just 140 meters, or around 450 feet across, can explode with the force of multiple nuclear bombs.

The threat of an "Armageddon-like" asteroid colliding into Earth is more real than you might think.

Though an Earth-destroying asteroid of the size that a crack team led by Bruce Willis and Ben Affleck destroyed with a nuclear bomb is statistically improbable, NASA is taking the threat of smaller, near-Earth Objects (NEOs) seriously.

According to a new report the agency released earlier this month - which is based on a 2016 report - NASA is seeking to coordinate a strategy across a number of federal agencies to locate, track, and destroy asteroids that may pose a threat to Earth. It's a mission handed to the space agency from Congress, which passed a law in 2005 charging NASA with finding potentially hazardous NEOs.

"If a real threat does arise, we are prepared to pull together the information about what options might work and provide that information to decision-makers," Lindley Johnson, NASA's aptly-named Planetary Defense Officer, said in a press briefing.

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neocam asteroid hunter spacecraft discovery nasa jpl caltech

NASA/JPL-Caltech

An artist's concept of the NEOCam asteroid-hunting mission.

NASA is focused on finding asteroids that are larger than 450 feet across, otherwise known as city-killers.

We're basically sitting on a moving target for these space rocks.

Asteroids of this size are difficult to detect, though they can pack a serious punch: if they smash into the Earth, or even enter our atmosphere, they can explode with the energy of least 60 megatons-worth of TNT - more powerful than the strongest nuclear weapon ever detonated.

"You do that over a city, and it's a very, very bad day," Mark Sykes, director of the Planetary Science Institute previously told Business Insider.

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Scientists estimate that there are over a million of these city-destroyers lurking just beyond the edges of our sensing capabilities - and we've only discovered about a third of them.

NASA asteroid survey

NASA

Near-Earth Asteroids of various sizes: number detected to date and estimated total number

Smaller asteroids can pose a threat, too. Take the asteroid that exploded over Chelyabinsk, Russia in 2013. The 65-foot asteroid - which no space agency detected before it entered the atmosphere, because of its small size - caused broken windows and a number of injuries.

In 1908, a 150-foot asteroid wiped out an area roughly the size of New York City over Tunguska, Russia with a force equivalent to a nuclear bomb. If that asteroid hit a major city, it could potentially cause millions of casualties.

Tunguska New York City Asteroid Impact Comparison

NASA

Equivalent area of destruction for a Tunguska-sized asteroid over New York City.

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One of the ways scientists want to find these asteroids is with the proposed Near-Earth Object Camera, or NEOCam, which is a space-based telescope that would find hazardous asteroids using an infrared camera.

NASA committed to funding the NEOCam last year, but its future is uncertain, as the technology remains in an "extended study phase," according to SpaceNews.

We need to find these asteroids before it's too late. An asteroid the size of the Statue of Liberty - between 200 and 400 feet across - narrowly missed Earth in May, the largest asteroid to come that close to our planet in hundreds of years.

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