As scary as an incoming asteroid may sound, it doesn’t have to mean the end of the world. It’s true space rocks sometimes collide with our planet, as happened with devastating effect 66 million years ago when a massive impact wiped out the dinosaurs. But such events are the exception rather than the rule. By astronomical standards, Earth is a very small target. Asteroids move on precisely determined orbits, so the vast majority of them simply whiz past the planet at a safe distance. Such encounters are a good thing for astronomers because they give them a chance to study asteroids at close range, and these small, rocky objects can tell us a lot about the origin and evolution of the Solar System. When the first asteroids were discovered, they were all found to lie in an ‘asteroid belt’ between the orbits of Mars and Jupiter. It’s still true today that most known asteroids are located in this region.
Asteroids can be thought of as miniature planets, a few metres to several thousand metres in size, which move on a range of orbits around the Sun in much the same way planets do. All these orbits have a similar basic shape: a kind of distorted circle called an ellipse. The point on the ellipse that’s furthest from the Sun is called aphelion, while the closest is perihelion. In the case of a planet like Earth, the difference between perihelion and aphelion is very small, which means that the orbit is almost circular. Asteroid orbits, on the other hand, can be much more eccentric than this, and some of them can actually have a perihelion inside Earth’s orbit and an aphelion outside it. In other words, their orbits around the Sun overlap with our own planet’s.
THE POWER OF WATER
We're hooked on fossil fuels. But hydroelectric power is becoming an increasingly important replacement for coal and oil
EXPLORING THE MOON'S CAVES
Earth's rocky neighbour is home to a network of unexplored caves, and scientists are keen to take a peek inside
HOW TO ELECT THE PRESIDENT
The campaigns, votes and elections that put someone in America's most powerful office
WHAT IS MORNING SICKNESS?
Why some pregnancies can cause nausea and vomiting
20 WEIRDEST SCIENCE MYSTERIES
From dark matter to deep-sea crabs, science still can't fully explain these strange quirks of nature
THE TRIANGULUM GALAXY SHINES IN A NEW HUBBLE IMAGE
A nearby galaxy is shining with star formation in a new image from the Hubble Space Telescope.
The world's fastest charger fully powers smartphones in five minutes
Scientists have revealed the fastest battery-charging technology in the world for smartphones, which can fully charge a smartphone in less than five minutes.
Real-time brain stimulation slashes Parkinson's symptoms by half in trials
Brain stimulation that rapidly adjusts in real-time can dramatically reduce Parkinson’s symptoms, an early trial suggests.
The hottest ocean temperature in 400 years threatens the Great Barrier Reef
The Great Barrier Reef is facing the hottest sea surface temperatures in four centuries.
Massive medieval coin hoard worth about 150 sheep' discovered
Archaeologists in Germany have unearthed over 1,500 medieval silver coins after a citizen noticed what looked like ‘small metal plates’ while digging during a construction project.