Това е стара снимка на преминаващ голям метеорит до земята, под нея им информация за всички по големи астероиди, които са минали покрай нас или ще преминат, най-големия ще се появи в близост през 2029. Някой може би ще каже, че има заплаха от неизвестни астероиди, които да ни ударят. Все пак вероятността да човек да го блъсне кола или да има друга злополука или природно бедствие е много по-голяма от неизвестен астероид в близките 1000 години.
Така че ако някой се притеснявал от астероидна заплаха, нека бъде сигурен че е много по-вероятно да го настигне някакво друго нещастие.
http://apod.nasa.gov/apod/ap110306.html

Asteroids in the Distance
Credit: R. Evans & K. Stapelfeldt (JPL), WFPC2, HST, NASA
Explanation: Rocks from space hit Earth every day. The larger the rock, though, the less often Earth is struck. Many kilograms of space dust pitter to Earth daily. Larger bits appear initially as a bright meteor. Baseball-sized rocks and ice-balls streak through our atmosphere daily, most evaporating quickly to nothing. Significant threats do exist for rocks near 100 meters in diameter, which strike the Earth roughly every 1000 years. An object this size could cause significant tsunamis were it to strike an ocean, potentially devastating even distant shores. A collision with a massive asteroid, over 1 km across, is more rare, occurring typically millions of years apart, but could have truly global consequences. Many asteroids remain undiscovered. In fact, one was discovered in 1998 as the long blue streak in the above archival image taken by the Hubble Space Telescope. In 2002 June, the small 100-meter asteroid 2002 MN was discovered only after it whizzed by the Earth, passing well within the orbit of the Moon. 2002 MN passed closer than any asteroid since 1994 XM1, but not as close as 2004 MN4 will pass in 2029. A collision with a large asteroid would not affect Earth's orbit so much as raise dust that would affect Earth's climate. One likely result is a global extinction of many species of life, possibly dwarfing the ongoing extinction occurring now.