Huge asteroid three times the size of a London bus will zip between Earth and the moon TOMORROW

A huge asteroid three times the size of a London bus will zip between Earth and the moon tomorrow at a distance of just 159,000 miles, NASA has revealed.

Dubbed 2021 GT3, the 108ft long space rock will fly by the Earth on April 10, making its closest approach to the planet at about 22:30 BST.

NASA says the asteroid poses no direct threat to life on Earth as it will be too far away at its closest point to collide with the planet.

The space rock, which will zip between the Earth and the Moon at 54,000 miles per hour, will be too faint to see with anything but the largest professional telescopes. 

Dubbed 2021 GT3, the 108ft long space rock will fly by the Earth on April 10, making its closest approach to the planet at about 22:30 BST

Dubbed 2021 GT3, the 108ft long space rock will fly by the Earth on April 10, making its closest approach to the planet at about 22:30 BST

Dubbed 2021 GT3, the 108ft long space rock will fly by the Earth on April 10, making its closest approach to the planet at about 22:30 BST

Explained: The difference between an asteroid, meteorite and other space rocks 

An asteroid is a large chunk of rock left over from collisions or the early solar system. Most are located between Mars and Jupiter in the Main Belt.

A comet is a rock covered in ice, methane and other compounds. Their orbits take them much further out of the solar system.

A meteor is what astronomers call a flash of light in the atmosphere when debris burns up.

This debris itself is known as a meteoroid. Most are so small they are vapourised in the atmosphere.

If any of this meteoroid makes it to Earth, it is called a meteorite.

Meteors, meteoroids and meteorites normally originate from asteroids and comets.

For example, if Earth passes through the tail of a comet, much of the debris burns up in the atmosphere, forming a meteor shower.

It has an absolute magnification of 26, which will make it invisible to even larger back garden telescopes, which usually see up to about 15th magnitude on a clear sky.

It will be 159,000 miles from the Earth at its closest approach – for comparison the Earth is roughly 238,900 miles from the moon.

The orbit of the object takes it from the asteroid belt between Mars and Jupiter, in closer to the sun than Mercury and back out to the asteroid belt.

During its trip around the sun, the space rock crosses the orbital path of Mars, Earth, Venus and Mercury, making it a potential collision for all of them, although this orbit the only planet it will be close to is the Earth. 

The space rock was first detected on April 6 and orbits the sun every 650 days. 

GT3 is classified as a Near Earth Object (NEO), posing a potential risk to Earth, but any object coming within 1.3 times the distance from Earth to the Sun is also an NEO.

‘Most NEOs pose no peril at all. It’s the small percentage of Potentially Hazardous Asteroids that draws extra scrutiny,’ NASA said in its Asteroid Watch article.

‘These objects are defined as those that approach Earth at less than half the Earth-Sun distance,’ and GT3 falls within the potentially hazardous grouping.

The rock is about the same length as three London routemaster buses, or, according to the US space agency, roughly the size of an average house. 

It is the second similar sized rock to make a close approach, with 2021 GT coming 688,000 miles of the Earth at 20:11 BST this evening, passing three times further from the Earth than the moon, according to NASA. 

Two other rocks will pass by the Earth tomorrow, both large than GT3, but both passing millions of miles from the planet.

GB4, a mammoth 236ft asteroid will pass three million miles from the Earth at about 01:00 BST, followed by GT3 at 22:30, then GT1, a 131ft long space rock will pass 2.8 million miles from the Earth at about 23:16 BST.

GT3 is classified as a Near Earth Object (NEO), posing a potential risk to Earth, but any object coming within 1.3 times the distance from Earth to the Sun is also an NEO

GT3 is classified as a Near Earth Object (NEO), posing a potential risk to Earth, but any object coming within 1.3 times the distance from Earth to the Sun is also an NEO

It will be a busy weekend for asteroids zipping past the Earth, although none will come closers than GT3 and most will be millions of miles away, NASA said.

Asteroids are rocky fragments left over from the formation of the solar system about 4.6 billion years ago, most orbiting between Mars and Jupiter.

Occasionally, asteroids’ orbital paths are influenced by the gravitational tug of planets, which cause their paths to alter. 

When this happens it can bring them in a potential collision orbit with the Earth or other planets, including one that killed the dinosaurs 65 million years ago.  

Astronomers are hunting for asteroids larger than 450ft as they can cause ‘catastrophic damage’

Researchers have discovered most of the asteroids that are about a kilometers in size, but are now on the hunt for those that are about 459ft (140m) – as they could cause catastrophic damage.

Although nobody knows when the next big impact will occur, scientists have found themselves under pressure to predict – and intercept – its arrival.

Artist's impression pictured 

Artist’s impression pictured 

‘Sooner or later we will get… a minor or major impact,’ said Rolf Densing, who heads the European Space Operations Centre (ESOC) in Darmstadt

It may not happen in our lifetime, he said, but ‘the risk that Earth will get hit in a devastating event one day is very high.’

‘For now, there is little we can do.’ 

Source: AFP