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The odds of asteroid 2024 YR4 hitting the moon went up


View of a starfield with 2 insets showing a dot of light each.
NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope captured asteroid 2024 YR4 in spring 2025. The inset at top is from NIRCam, which sees reflected light in the near-infrared. The inset at bottom is from MIRI, which sees thermal light in the mid-infrared region. Image via NASA/ ESA/ CSA/ STScI/ A. Rivkin (JHU APL).

The odds of asteroid 2024 YR4 hitting the moon went up

Back in February, we all breathed a sigh of relief after learning the odds of asteroid 2024 YR4 hitting Earth in 2032 and beyond dropped to near zero. But NASA shared an update on April 2, 2025, on the asteroid’s odds of hitting the moon … and they’ve gone up. Back on February 23, 2025, the odds of 2024 YR4 hitting the moon were about 1.8%, or a 1-in-56 chance. Now NASA said they’ve more than doubled. Using new data from the Webb space telescope and ground-based telescopes, NASA said the odds of 2024 YR4 hitting the moon stand at 3.8%.

So when and where might the asteroid hit on the moon? If it hit, it would be on December 22, 2032. There’s a good chance it would be near the moon’s limb, or edge. Which means it could be behind the limb, and therefore we wouldn’t get much of a show. Or it could be on the side facing Earth.

The new observations also give us a better idea of the asteroid’s size. NASA said 2024 YR4 is somewhere between 174 to 220 feet (53 to 67 meters) in size, or about the size of a 10-story building. Previous estimates of the asteroid were around 150 feet (45 meters). So it’s larger than we thought, and if it hits the moon, it’ll pack a good wallop. What a sight that would be!

A circle showing the moon's orbit around Earth and yellow dots showing possible impact path of the asteroid.
NASA shared this graphic on April 2, 2025, of the possible locations (yellow dots) of asteroid 2024 YR4 and the moon on December 22, 2032. Image via NASA JPL/CNEOS.

When the odds of 2024 YR4 hitting Earth plummeted

Inventor of the Torino scale, Richard Binzel, told EarthSky on February 23, 2025:

Asteroid 2024 YR4 has now been reassigned to Torino Scale Level 0: the level for No Hazard. Additional tracking of its orbital path reduces its possibility of intersecting the Earth to below the 1-in-1,000 threshold. That is the established level for downgrading to Level 0. [Editor’s note: Odds of 1-in-1,000 are the threshold for Level 0 for any space object smaller than 100 meters. The initial estimates of 2024 YR4 were for a size of 50 meters].

2024 YR4 fell to Torino Scale Level 1 (Green ‘Normal’) on February 20, down from Level 3 (Yellow ‘Meriting Attention by Astronomers’).

Level 0 is labeled as the (White) No Hazard zone on the Torino Scale, which considers the two dimensions of impact probability and impact consequence in assigning its Levels. Find the Torino Scale categories full descriptions here.

In detail for the current probability, the NASA JPL Center for Near-Earth Object Studies now lists the 2024 YR4 probability as 0.00005 (0.005%) or 1-in-20,000 for its passage by Earth in 2032.

That’s zero, folks!


In late January, EarthSky’s Deborah Byrd interviewed asteroid expert Richard Binzel of MIT of MIT – inventor of the Torino Impact Hazard Scale – about a possible strike to Earth by asteroid 2024 YR4. He also talked a lot about the overall picture of how astronomers are keeping Earth safe from asteroid collisions. It’s fascinating stuff. Watch the video here.

Odds of impact increased before dropping

Not long after 2024 YR4’s discovery – in late 2024 – astronomers were saying there was a 1-in-83 chance of a strike. Then the odds went to 1 in 53, then 1 in 43, then 1 in 38, and – at worst – the odds were 1 in 32. That became the new record for an asteroid on the Torino scale, beating the infamous asteroid Apophis in 2004. As we have been saying all along:

It’s likely that the odds will go down to zero with further data.

The new estimates for 2024 YR4 – showing it is no longer considered a possible threat to Earth – come from NASA’s Center for Near Earth Object Studies (CNEOS) at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, California.

Asteroid 2024 YR4 is moving away from us

Asteroid 2024 YR4 is 116 million miles (188 million km) away and getting farther every second. Some observers noticed the asteroid will be somewhat “close” to the Lucy spacecraft, so its team checked to see if 2024 YR4 would be observable by the spacecraft. But – at its closest to Lucy – the asteroid will still be too faint for the spacecraft’s L’LORRI instrument to detect.

Asteroid 2024 YR4 discovered on Christmas Day 2024

Asteroid 2024 YR4 swept into the view of the ATLAS asteroid impact early warning system – with telescopes in Hawaii, Chile and South Africa – on December 25, 2024.

EarthSky spoke with the inventor of the Torino scale, Richard Binzel of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), on January 27, 2025. He said:

In all likelihood, this object will fall to Torino Scale 1 and then 0; or directly fall to 0 with more measurements.

An asteroid’s ranking on the Torino scale

The only asteroid ever to have a higher score on the Torino scale was 99942 Apophis. It briefly had a rating of 4 on the Torino Scale in late 2004. And, yes, Apophis caused a stir and earned the nickname of the Doomsday Asteroid. But asteroid Apophis is now just a zero on the Torino scale. That’s because astronomers watched it carefully, refining their knowledge of its orbit. They determined that Apophis has a negligible risk of impact for at least a century.

So it’s normal for an asteroid’s score on the Torino scale can change. In fact, is likely to change as astronomers gather more observations of the object and also track its motion around the sun.

Watch a video of size comparisons in asteroids, here.

What is the Torino scale?

The IAU has been using the Torino Impact Hazard Scale since 1999 to categorize asteroids that could potentially hit Earth. An object – such as 2024 YR4 – with a score of 3 puts it in the yellow zone. This means the object merits attention by astronomers and the public. The description of a score of 3 reads:

A close encounter, meriting attention by astronomers. Current calculations give a 1% or greater chance of collision capable of localized destruction. Most likely, new telescopic observations will lead to reassignment to Level 0. Attention by public and by public officials is merited if the encounter is less than a decade away.

In fact, most new asteroids that get listed on the Torino scale have their likelihood of hitting Earth go up with more observations … until it drops to zero. That’s because the uncertain path of the asteroid is wide and more observations shrinks the path, making it look more likely, until the path shrinks enough to show that it will not cross Earth’s. It’s likely that’s what will happen with asteroid 2024 YR4 also.

In 2023, EarthSky spoke with the inventor of the Torino scale, Richard Binzel of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. He said that we should expect more objects to make the Torino scale as our technology improves, allowing us to see smaller objects we otherwise would have missed.

Asteroid Potential Impact Warning Notification

Because the asteroid passed a slim threshold of hitting Earth, it triggered a Potential Impact Warning Notification on January 29, 2025. That warning came from the International Asteroid Warning Network, a global collaboration of observatories, scientific institutions, and other interested parties, coordinated by NASA.

On January 29, the impact probability was a mere 1.3% as calculated by CNEOS and ESA’s Near Earth Objects Coordination Centre in Frascati, Italy, in cooperation with the NEO Dynamic Site (NEODyS-2), also in Italy.

The notice gave the potential date of impact as December 22, 2032, and listed the possible impact locations (from across the eastern Pacific, northern South America, into Africa and southern Asia). If it were to strike Earth, it would cause “severe blast damage.” Specifically, the blast damage could occur as far as 30 miles (50 km) from the site of impact.

DART

If, someday, we find an asteroid that is on a collision course with Earth, we’ll be somewhat prepared. We’ve already sent a mission to hit and move an asteroid as a test of our planetary defense system. That mission was the Double Asteroid Redirection Test (DART), which impacted with an asteroid’s moon named Dimorphos in 2022.

And Dimorphos was much larger than asteroid 2024 YR4, at 525 feet (160 meters) across.

Asteroid 2024 YR4: Distant Earth in space with a gray, irregular, cratered rocky object in foreground.
Artist’s illustration of an asteroid approaching Earth. The ATLAS telescope discovered the asteroid 2024 YR24 on December 25, 2024, that – as of January 27, 2025 – had 1-in-83 odds of hitting Earth in 2032. The odds have since changed. Image via urikyo33/ Pixabay.

Bottom line: New observations of asteroid 2024 YR4 with Webb and ground-based telescopes have increased its odds of hitting the moon and show that the asteroid is larger than we first estimated.

Via:

IAU Minor Planet Center

ESA

IAWN

The post The odds of asteroid 2024 YR4 hitting the moon went up first appeared on EarthSky.



from EarthSky https://ift.tt/ndxT8Oc
View of a starfield with 2 insets showing a dot of light each.
NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope captured asteroid 2024 YR4 in spring 2025. The inset at top is from NIRCam, which sees reflected light in the near-infrared. The inset at bottom is from MIRI, which sees thermal light in the mid-infrared region. Image via NASA/ ESA/ CSA/ STScI/ A. Rivkin (JHU APL).

The odds of asteroid 2024 YR4 hitting the moon went up

Back in February, we all breathed a sigh of relief after learning the odds of asteroid 2024 YR4 hitting Earth in 2032 and beyond dropped to near zero. But NASA shared an update on April 2, 2025, on the asteroid’s odds of hitting the moon … and they’ve gone up. Back on February 23, 2025, the odds of 2024 YR4 hitting the moon were about 1.8%, or a 1-in-56 chance. Now NASA said they’ve more than doubled. Using new data from the Webb space telescope and ground-based telescopes, NASA said the odds of 2024 YR4 hitting the moon stand at 3.8%.

So when and where might the asteroid hit on the moon? If it hit, it would be on December 22, 2032. There’s a good chance it would be near the moon’s limb, or edge. Which means it could be behind the limb, and therefore we wouldn’t get much of a show. Or it could be on the side facing Earth.

The new observations also give us a better idea of the asteroid’s size. NASA said 2024 YR4 is somewhere between 174 to 220 feet (53 to 67 meters) in size, or about the size of a 10-story building. Previous estimates of the asteroid were around 150 feet (45 meters). So it’s larger than we thought, and if it hits the moon, it’ll pack a good wallop. What a sight that would be!

A circle showing the moon's orbit around Earth and yellow dots showing possible impact path of the asteroid.
NASA shared this graphic on April 2, 2025, of the possible locations (yellow dots) of asteroid 2024 YR4 and the moon on December 22, 2032. Image via NASA JPL/CNEOS.

When the odds of 2024 YR4 hitting Earth plummeted

Inventor of the Torino scale, Richard Binzel, told EarthSky on February 23, 2025:

Asteroid 2024 YR4 has now been reassigned to Torino Scale Level 0: the level for No Hazard. Additional tracking of its orbital path reduces its possibility of intersecting the Earth to below the 1-in-1,000 threshold. That is the established level for downgrading to Level 0. [Editor’s note: Odds of 1-in-1,000 are the threshold for Level 0 for any space object smaller than 100 meters. The initial estimates of 2024 YR4 were for a size of 50 meters].

2024 YR4 fell to Torino Scale Level 1 (Green ‘Normal’) on February 20, down from Level 3 (Yellow ‘Meriting Attention by Astronomers’).

Level 0 is labeled as the (White) No Hazard zone on the Torino Scale, which considers the two dimensions of impact probability and impact consequence in assigning its Levels. Find the Torino Scale categories full descriptions here.

In detail for the current probability, the NASA JPL Center for Near-Earth Object Studies now lists the 2024 YR4 probability as 0.00005 (0.005%) or 1-in-20,000 for its passage by Earth in 2032.

That’s zero, folks!


In late January, EarthSky’s Deborah Byrd interviewed asteroid expert Richard Binzel of MIT of MIT – inventor of the Torino Impact Hazard Scale – about a possible strike to Earth by asteroid 2024 YR4. He also talked a lot about the overall picture of how astronomers are keeping Earth safe from asteroid collisions. It’s fascinating stuff. Watch the video here.

Odds of impact increased before dropping

Not long after 2024 YR4’s discovery – in late 2024 – astronomers were saying there was a 1-in-83 chance of a strike. Then the odds went to 1 in 53, then 1 in 43, then 1 in 38, and – at worst – the odds were 1 in 32. That became the new record for an asteroid on the Torino scale, beating the infamous asteroid Apophis in 2004. As we have been saying all along:

It’s likely that the odds will go down to zero with further data.

The new estimates for 2024 YR4 – showing it is no longer considered a possible threat to Earth – come from NASA’s Center for Near Earth Object Studies (CNEOS) at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, California.

Asteroid 2024 YR4 is moving away from us

Asteroid 2024 YR4 is 116 million miles (188 million km) away and getting farther every second. Some observers noticed the asteroid will be somewhat “close” to the Lucy spacecraft, so its team checked to see if 2024 YR4 would be observable by the spacecraft. But – at its closest to Lucy – the asteroid will still be too faint for the spacecraft’s L’LORRI instrument to detect.

Asteroid 2024 YR4 discovered on Christmas Day 2024

Asteroid 2024 YR4 swept into the view of the ATLAS asteroid impact early warning system – with telescopes in Hawaii, Chile and South Africa – on December 25, 2024.

EarthSky spoke with the inventor of the Torino scale, Richard Binzel of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), on January 27, 2025. He said:

In all likelihood, this object will fall to Torino Scale 1 and then 0; or directly fall to 0 with more measurements.

An asteroid’s ranking on the Torino scale

The only asteroid ever to have a higher score on the Torino scale was 99942 Apophis. It briefly had a rating of 4 on the Torino Scale in late 2004. And, yes, Apophis caused a stir and earned the nickname of the Doomsday Asteroid. But asteroid Apophis is now just a zero on the Torino scale. That’s because astronomers watched it carefully, refining their knowledge of its orbit. They determined that Apophis has a negligible risk of impact for at least a century.

So it’s normal for an asteroid’s score on the Torino scale can change. In fact, is likely to change as astronomers gather more observations of the object and also track its motion around the sun.

Watch a video of size comparisons in asteroids, here.

What is the Torino scale?

The IAU has been using the Torino Impact Hazard Scale since 1999 to categorize asteroids that could potentially hit Earth. An object – such as 2024 YR4 – with a score of 3 puts it in the yellow zone. This means the object merits attention by astronomers and the public. The description of a score of 3 reads:

A close encounter, meriting attention by astronomers. Current calculations give a 1% or greater chance of collision capable of localized destruction. Most likely, new telescopic observations will lead to reassignment to Level 0. Attention by public and by public officials is merited if the encounter is less than a decade away.

In fact, most new asteroids that get listed on the Torino scale have their likelihood of hitting Earth go up with more observations … until it drops to zero. That’s because the uncertain path of the asteroid is wide and more observations shrinks the path, making it look more likely, until the path shrinks enough to show that it will not cross Earth’s. It’s likely that’s what will happen with asteroid 2024 YR4 also.

In 2023, EarthSky spoke with the inventor of the Torino scale, Richard Binzel of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. He said that we should expect more objects to make the Torino scale as our technology improves, allowing us to see smaller objects we otherwise would have missed.

Asteroid Potential Impact Warning Notification

Because the asteroid passed a slim threshold of hitting Earth, it triggered a Potential Impact Warning Notification on January 29, 2025. That warning came from the International Asteroid Warning Network, a global collaboration of observatories, scientific institutions, and other interested parties, coordinated by NASA.

On January 29, the impact probability was a mere 1.3% as calculated by CNEOS and ESA’s Near Earth Objects Coordination Centre in Frascati, Italy, in cooperation with the NEO Dynamic Site (NEODyS-2), also in Italy.

The notice gave the potential date of impact as December 22, 2032, and listed the possible impact locations (from across the eastern Pacific, northern South America, into Africa and southern Asia). If it were to strike Earth, it would cause “severe blast damage.” Specifically, the blast damage could occur as far as 30 miles (50 km) from the site of impact.

DART

If, someday, we find an asteroid that is on a collision course with Earth, we’ll be somewhat prepared. We’ve already sent a mission to hit and move an asteroid as a test of our planetary defense system. That mission was the Double Asteroid Redirection Test (DART), which impacted with an asteroid’s moon named Dimorphos in 2022.

And Dimorphos was much larger than asteroid 2024 YR4, at 525 feet (160 meters) across.

Asteroid 2024 YR4: Distant Earth in space with a gray, irregular, cratered rocky object in foreground.
Artist’s illustration of an asteroid approaching Earth. The ATLAS telescope discovered the asteroid 2024 YR24 on December 25, 2024, that – as of January 27, 2025 – had 1-in-83 odds of hitting Earth in 2032. The odds have since changed. Image via urikyo33/ Pixabay.

Bottom line: New observations of asteroid 2024 YR4 with Webb and ground-based telescopes have increased its odds of hitting the moon and show that the asteroid is larger than we first estimated.

Via:

IAU Minor Planet Center

ESA

IAWN

The post The odds of asteroid 2024 YR4 hitting the moon went up first appeared on EarthSky.



from EarthSky https://ift.tt/ndxT8Oc

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