Daily Starflipped into Latest NewsAsteroid 'size of the Burj Khalifa' set to collide with Earth’s orbit next weekdailystar.co.uk - Emma ParkerThe Burj Khalifa is a skyscraper in Dubai, United Arab Emirates, and is the tallest building on record. Asteroid 153201 (2000 WO107) has the …
Daily Starflipped into Latest NewsAsteroid 'bigger than Boeing-747 jet' to collide with Earth's orbit next weekdailystar.co.uk - Emma ParkerNASA is tracking an asteroid estimated to be between 36m and 81m in diameter, which is 1.180 times the length of the wingspan of a Boeing-747 jet …
Pops Radishflipped into Space,its a big universe out there.Asteroid bigger than St Paul’s Cathedral to collide with Earth's orbit next weekdailystar.co.uk - Emma ParkerNASA is tracking Asteroid 2020 TYI, which is expected to whizz by on Saturday November 7, and estimated to be potentially bigger than St Paul's …
Avatarsandra oppflipped into Space, UFOS, And The Universe'Potentially hazardous' asteroid wider than two football fields set to fly past Earth next weekverified_publisherFox News - Chris CiacciaAn asteroid wider than two professional football fields is set to fly safely past Earth on Sept. 14, according to NASA's Center for Near-Earth Object Studies. The space rock, known as asteroid 2020 QL2, is more than 120 meters (393 feet) in diameter, the government agency notes. It is expected to …
The News, Portsmouthflipped into Portsmouth NewsAn asteroid bigger than St Paul’s Cathedral will enter Earth's orbit next weekportsmouth.co.uk - Iain LeggatNASA is currently tracking an asteroid potentially bigger than St Paul’s Cathedral, which is expected to zoom past Earth on Saturday 7 November. Named …
Newsweekflipped into NewsweekTwo huge asteroids the size of the Great Pyramid of Giza are set to pass Earth over next 2 weeksNewsweek - Hannah OsborneThese two asteroids, named 2020 RO and 2020 PM7, are the largest to pass Earth over the next two weeks. Between Friday and October 2, 21 asteroids …
The New York Timesflipped into ScienceNASA’s Asteroid Mission Packs Away Its Cargo. Next Stop: Earth.verified_publisherThe New York Times - Kenneth ChangA NASA spacecraft 200 million miles away from Earth has packed up a sample of an asteroid it collected last week. That chased away concerns that it had traveled for years across the solar system but lost much of the scientific payload it had gone to collect. The mission’s managers are now beginning …