Our planet is under threat, and NASA has a dire warning: 15,000 asteroids, each with the potential to devastate an entire city, are lurking in space, ready to strike at any moment. But the real concern lies with the mid-sized rocks, approximately 140 meters wide, which NASA admits it cannot defend against.
Kelly Fast, NASA's acting planetary defense officer, paints a grim picture. She reveals that these 'city-killer' asteroids could cause significant regional damage if they were to collide with a populated area. But here's the catch: NASA's telescopes are adept at tracking larger asteroids capable of global destruction, but they struggle to detect these mid-sized threats.
Fast explains, 'Identifying these asteroids is a time-consuming task, even with our advanced telescopes.' This warning comes on the heels of the 3I/ATLAS comet, which kept astronauts on high alert throughout 2025. And this is not an isolated incident. In 2024, asteroid YR4, the size of a football field, was found to be on a potential collision course with Earth. Fortunately, it veered away, but its orbit suggests a close encounter with the Earth-Moon system in 2032.
The question arises: Are we doing enough to prepare for these cosmic dangers? Nancy Chabot, a mission chief at Johns Hopkins University, doesn't think so. She believes that global investment in asteroid defense is lacking, leaving us vulnerable to these silent, deadly space rocks. And this is the part most people miss: the potential for catastrophic damage is very real, yet it remains a relatively overlooked aspect of space exploration.