It seems humanity can breathe a slight sigh of relief for now, as NASA has reduced the chance of a ‘city-killer’ asteroid colliding with Earth. 

Asteroid 2024 YR4 – which was only discovered back in December – now has a 1-in-67 (1.5 per cent) likelihood of hitting our planet on December 22, 2032.

This is significantly down from the space agency’s earlier prediction of one-in-32 (3.1 per cent) made earlier this week. 

In a post on X (Twitter), NASA shared new ground-based telescope observations of the rock, which is estimated be about 130 to 300 feet (40 to 90 metres) across. 

NASA said in the tweet: ‘New observations of asteroid 2024 YR4 helped us update its chance of impact in 2032. 

‘The current probability is 1.5%. Our understanding of the asteroid’s path improves with every observation.’ 

However, by April 2025, the object will be so far away that it will become too faint to be detected by Earth-based telescopes. 

Further updates will not be possible until 2028 when 2024 YR4 approaches Earth and becomes bright enough to be detected again. 

In a post on X (Twitter), NASA posted new observations of the space rock, which is estimated be about 130 to 300 feet (40 to 90 metres) across

A scary simulation video was created to show what would happen if the asteroid hit New York City, revealing the impact would level buildings

A scary simulation video was created to show what would happen if the asteroid hit New York City, revealing the impact would level buildings  

NASA’s planetary defence department is constantly tracking the object’s trajectory, and provided the update in a blog post.

On Tuesday, it updated the impact probability of asteroid 2024 YR4 in 2032 to 3.1 per cent – the highest impact probability NASA has ever recorded for an object of this size or larger.

However, on Wednesday, new data collected overnight has reduced the impact probability to a 1-in-67 (1.5 per cent) chance. 

Asteroid 2024 YR4 orbits the sun on an elliptical orbit – meaning one that its elongated and not perfectly circular. 

Right now, it is actually relatively close to Earth – around 30 million miles away – which is why NASA telescopes can detect it in the night sky.

It is moving further away because it’s set to begin an orbit around the sun – but by December 2032 it’s due to come concerningly close to, or even hit, our planet. 

If and when it impacts Earth, the asteroid will be travelling an astonishing 85 million miles per hour (38,000 km per second) approximately. 

Asteroids speed up as they approach the sun because of the increased gravitational pull from the sun as they get closer. 

This image shows the orbit of asteroid 2024 YR4 in purple with the sun in the centre and orbits of planets (Mercury = cyan; Venus = yellow; Earth = dark blue; Mars = red). Note the asteroid’s position (purple dot) in relation to Earth (dark blue dot) about a month before an impact might happen 

NASA says: ‘For 2024 YR4, we are still in the information gathering stage. The likelihood of an Earth impact is still very low and will likely decrease as we gain more observations’. Pictured, artist’s impression of an Earth-bound asteroid 

What do we know about 2024 YR4?

First detected: December 27, 2024

Estimated size: 40-90 metres (130-300 feet)

Speed relative to Earth: 29,000 miles per hour (46,800 kmph)

Date of possible impact: December 22, 2032

Probability of impact: 1-in-67 (1.5 per cent)

Destructive potential: A ‘city killer’ on a scale on the Tunguska asteroid, which detonated with a force equal to 15-30 megatons of TNT.  

If this space rock were to hit Earth, it would create a blast equivalent to detonating 7.7 megatons of TNT and leave a 3,000-foot-wide crater in the ground. 

The shockwave radiating out from the impact would wipe out an area the size of a major city – which is why it has been designated a ‘city-killer’. 

Retired Canadian astronaut Chris Hadfield has compared asteroid 2024 YR4 to ‘a bullet zeroing in on Earth from deep space’. 

‘It’s about 500 times more powerful than the biggest bomb we exploded during World War II,’ he told LBC News. 

According to current calculations, the ‘risk corridor’ where it could potentially hit stretches from northern South America across the Pacific to sub-Saharan Africa and into Asia. 

Worryingly, this path extends over several densely populated regions including Chennai, India and Hainan Island, China. 

In May, the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST), the most powerful telescope ever built, is scheduled to observe this asteroid.

The data it gathers should help astronomers significantly narrow down where it might hit Earth in 2032. 

The current ‘risk corridor,’ or the geographical area where the 2024 YR4 is most likely to hit, runs from South America across the Atlantic Ocean to sub-Saharan Africa

2024 YR4 (pictured) is already so far from Earth that most telescopes can’t see it and will disappear beyond sight in April. Astronomers must gather as much data about the asteroid as possible before then in order to plan for when it returns in 2028

Alternatively, instead of slamming into Earth’s surface, 2024 YR4 may enter Earth’s atmosphere but explode in mid air in what’s known as an ‘airburst,’ like Tunguska asteroid in 1908. 

Asteroid 2024 YR4 is thought to be at least the same size as the Tunguska asteroid, which had an estimated diameter of 130 feet, according to NASA. 

The agency says: ‘The exact size of 2024 YR4 is still uncertain, but an airburst is a likely scenario for its size range.’ 

If we imagine that the asteroid is definitely on course for Earth, humanity’s best chance may be deflecting it off course by intentionally hitting it with a spacecraft. 

NASA demonstrated that this form of sophisticated planetary defence technique is indeed possible back in 2022, when its DART craft hit the asteroid Dimorphos. 

Although DART ‘worked wonders’, Dr Robin George Andrews, a volcanologist and author in London, said we ‘might not be able to stop 2024 YR4’ in a similar way. 

‘It doesn’t mean we can use kinetic impactors like it to deflect any asteroid whenever we want,’ Dr Andrews said. 

Of course, it’s overwhelmingly likely that the asteroid will pass by Earth on December 22, 2032 – leaving our planet unscathed. 

Asteroid 2024 YR4 is about the same size as the Tunguska asteroid, which caused the largest impact event in recorded history when it shot through Earth’s atmosphere in 1908, flattening 830 square miles (2,150 square km) of forest (pictured)

The Dimorphos space rock is pictured here as seen by the DART spacecraft 11 seconds before impact. Dimorphos did not pose any danger to Earth; instead, DART was rehearsal of what may be required if a space rock does one day threaten our planet

Dr Andrews thinks the odds will plummet to zero ‘as the orbit of the asteroid is more precisely defined’. 

Going forward, the odds of the asteroid hitting Earth will keep changing repeatedly as the rock hurtles along its looped trajectory. 

The constantly-shifting odds are due to the rock’s multi-million mph movement through space, which is made more difficult to discern when the full moon is out and there’s more moonlight. 

‘We can expect the probability numbers to wobble around a bit,’ said Professor Richard Binzel, astronomer at Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT). 

‘This is simply how scientific data measurements play out.’  

POTENTIAL METHODS FOR ELIMINATING THE THREAT OF AN ASTEROID  

DART is one of many concepts of how to negate the threat of an asteroid that have been suggested over the years. 

Multiple bumps 

Scientists in California have been firing projectiles at meteorites to simulate the best methods of altering the course of an asteroid so that it wouldn’t hit Earth. 

According to the results so far, an asteroid like Bennu that is rich in carbon could need several small bumps to charge its course.

‘These results indicate multiple successive impacts may be required to deflect rather than disrupt asteroids, particularly carbonaceous asteroids,’ researchers said.  

Nuke 

Another idea, known simply as ‘nuke’, involves blowing up a nuclear explosive close to the asteroid.

However, this could create smaller but still potentially dangerous fragments of rock that could spin off in all directions, potentially towards Earth. 

Ion Beam Deflection

With Ion Beam Deflection, plumes from a space probe’s thrusters would be directed towards the asteroid to gently push on its surface over a wide area. 

A thruster firing in the opposite direction would be needed to keep the spacecraft at a constant distance from the asteroid. 

Gravity tractor 

And yet another concept, gravity tractor, would deflect the asteroid without physically contacting it, but instead by using only its gravitational field to transmit a required impulse. 

Professor Colin Snodgrass, an astronomer at the University of Edinburgh said: ‘There have been a few concepts suggested, such as a ‘gravity tractor’ to slowly tow an asteroid away instead of pushing it with a kinetic impactor.

‘But the kinetic impactor is definitely the simplest technology to use on the sort of timescale that is most likely to be of concern for this size of asteroid, i.e. years to decades warning time.’

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