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'Potentially hazardous' asteroid the size of a blue whale to skim past Earth on Tuesday

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A "potentially hazardous" asteroid the size of a blue whale is set to zip past Earth on Tuesday (Sept. 17), according to NASA.

The skyscraper-size asteroid, named 2024 ON, has an estimated diameter between 721 and 1,575 feet (220 to 480 meters), and will zip past the Earth at 19,842 mph (31933 km/h) — or around 26 times the speed of sound.

At its closest approach, the asteroid will come within about 0.62 million miles (1 million kilometers) of Earth, around 2.6 times the average distance between Earth and the moon. By cosmic standards, this is an incredibly tight margin — but still far enough away that no Earthlings need worry about the passing space rock.

NASA deems any space object that comes within 120 million miles (193 million km) of Earth a "near-Earth object" and classifies any large object within 4.65 million miles (7.5 million km) of our planet as "potentially hazardous." NASA tracks the locations and orbits of roughly 28,000 asteroids, following them with the Asteroid Terrestrial-impact Last Alert System (ATLAS), an array of four telescopes that perform a scan of the entire night sky every 24 hours.

NASA has estimated the trajectories of all these near-Earth objects beyond the end of the century. Earth faces no known danger from an apocalyptic asteroid collision for at least the next 100 years, according to NASA.

Related: Why are asteroids and comets such weird shapes?

If 2024 ON were to hit Earth, it would not cause a cataclysmic event like the 7.5-mile-wide (12 km) dinosaur-killing asteroid that struck Earth 66 million years ago. But this doesn't mean its effects wouldn't be far-reaching. For example, a 2013 explosion of a 59-foot-wide (18 m) meteor above Chelyabinsk, Russia, generated a blast roughly equal to around 400 to 500 kilotons of TNT, or 26 to 33 times the energy released by the Hiroshima bomb, and injured around 1,500 people.

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