NASA data shows that 5 asteroids came very close to the Earth

NASA data shows that 5 asteroids came very close to the Earth


NASA has released the latest data about five asteroids which have just passed close to the Earth. These asteroids are traveling at a large speed and have come on the radar of the US space agency due to their close approach on Earth.

NASA has many Earth and Space-based telescopes, spacecraft and other gadgets to track these asteroids that warns whether any of them pose a threat to the Earth. The last one who raised a lot of uproar was the asteroid 2024 YR4, which was initially a major possibility of attacking Earth in December 2032. However, close and fresh data collection by other binoculars has changed NASA to crash against the Earth that the asteroid was going.

Now, the data emanating from NASA’s technical property shows that there is a very little probability of an asteroid that actually kills the Earth. The possibility is reduced by 0.28%. In fact, NASA has also deployed powerful heirs for the Hubble Space Telescope, James Web Space Telescope, which is to study this asteroid, shows that the US space agency quite serious about its ability to destroy Is.

However, it is in the future, currently, NASA is monitoring 5 asteroids that pass only through the earth.

1. Asteroid 2025 DZ2: It is a car-shaped asteroid measured at about 13 feet and its nearest Earth approach was 117,000 miles on 23 February 2025.

2.Steroid 2025 DS2: It is an airline-shaped asteroid measured at about 150 feet and its nearest Earth approach was 2,240,000 miles on 23 February 2025.

3. Asteroid 2025 DP1: It is a bus-shaped asteroid measured at about 29 feet and its nearest Earth approach was 2,390,000 miles on 23 February 2025.

4. Asteroid 2025 DX2: It is an airplane -shaped asteroid measured at about 82 feet and its nearest Earth approach was 2,920,000 miles on 23 February 2025.

5. Asteroid 2025 DF1: It is an airplane -shaped asteroid measured at about 110 feet and its nearest Earth approach was 2,520,000 miles on 24 February 2025.