HomeScience‘Dazzling fireball spotted’: Asteroid bursts over Pacific near California coast

‘Dazzling fireball spotted’: Asteroid bursts over Pacific near California coast

Asteroids are being tracked with increasing accuracy, providing valuable insights into space objects and Earth's defenses. Read about recent asteroid encounters and the growing accuracy in detection and prediction.

October 28, 2024 / 16:55 IST
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On October 21, 2024, an asteroid dubbed 2024 UQ approached Earth and entered the atmosphere about 1,000 kilometres off the California coast, providing an awe-inspiring but safe cosmic light show. (Representative Image: Canva)
On October 21, 2024, an asteroid dubbed 2024 UQ approached Earth and entered the atmosphere about 1,000 kilometres off the California coast, providing an awe-inspiring but safe cosmic light show. (Representative Image: Canva)

Asteroids may seem distant, yet these celestial rocks keep Earth’s watchers on edge as they orbit the sun, sometimes alarmingly close to our planet. Space agencies worldwide work tirelessly to track these rocks, equipped with advanced technology that helps them detect and predict asteroid trajectories with increasing accuracy. Already this year, three such encounters have occurred, bringing the total to ten. While these atmospheric entries remain mostly undetectable to the public, they offer scientists valuable insights into the behaviour of space objects and Earth’s defences.

Growing Accuracy in Asteroid Detection and Prediction

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On October 21, 2024, an asteroid dubbed 2024 UQ approached Earth and entered the atmosphere about 1,000 kilometres off the California coast, providing an awe-inspiring but safe cosmic light show. Estimated to be around three metres in size, 2024 UQ was first noticed by the ATLAS survey just before it crossed into Earth’s atmosphere. The asteroid, initially nicknamed Alldc6D, entered over the Pacific Ocean, eventually bursting into a fireball that illuminated the skies on October 22, 2024, at approximately 3:54 a.m. PT. The energy released by 2024 UQ was modest, even less than that of another asteroid that entered near the Philippines in September.

Meteor scientist Peter Brown, from Western University in Ontario, took to social media platform X to share that this was the 10th accurately predicted asteroid impact, signalling a new era in impact forecasting. “These events are becoming almost routine as surveys like ATLAS, Catalina, and Pan-STARRS grow more effective. This is the third such detected object to impact Earth this year,” Brown noted.