Once a millennium, on average, a small asteroid slams into Earth’s atmosphere and explodes with the energy of 1,000 Hiroshima-size blasts. That’s less than one-third as often as scientists previously supposed.
LOOK UP. This week’s Leonid meteor shower peppered the sky with small fireballs. AP/Wideworld
The new estimate stems from observations of fireballs from extraterrestrial objects of a certain size that burned up in Earth’s atmosphere between February 1994 and September 2002.
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