WASHINGTON: The world can breath simple. A titan space rock is not plunging towards Earth going to wipe out a significant part of the Americas, NASA has felt propelled to clarify taking after a twirl of online gossipy tidbits.
Online journals and strange news destinations have asserted a noteworthy space rock will effect earth in mid-to-late September close Puerto Rico, bringing about real obliteration all through the locale.
In any case, that hypothesis is altogether outlandish, NASA's Plane Drive Research facility said in a post this week, attempting to clammy down the Doomsday expectations.
"There is no logical premise - not one shred of confirmation - that a space rock or whatever other divine item will effect Earth on those dates," said the chief of the Close Earth Object office at the Plane Drive Research facility, Paul Chodas.
The lab clarified that every known hazardou space rocks have an under .01 percent possibility of affecting Earth in the following 100 years.
"On the off chance that there were any item sufficiently substantial to do that kind of pulverization in September, we would have seen something of it at this point," he said.
NASA pointed out that Doomsday scholars have made comparative expectations previously, including the Mayan logbook claim in 2012, all of which were not moved down by science and ended up being false.
"Once more, there is no current confirmation that a space rock or whatever other divine item is on a direction that will effect Earth," Chodas said.
AFP
Online journals and strange news destinations have asserted a noteworthy space rock will effect earth in mid-to-late September close Puerto Rico, bringing about real obliteration all through the locale.
In any case, that hypothesis is altogether outlandish, NASA's Plane Drive Research facility said in a post this week, attempting to clammy down the Doomsday expectations.
"There is no logical premise - not one shred of confirmation - that a space rock or whatever other divine item will effect Earth on those dates," said the chief of the Close Earth Object office at the Plane Drive Research facility, Paul Chodas.
The lab clarified that every known hazardou space rocks have an under .01 percent possibility of affecting Earth in the following 100 years.
"On the off chance that there were any item sufficiently substantial to do that kind of pulverization in September, we would have seen something of it at this point," he said.
NASA pointed out that Doomsday scholars have made comparative expectations previously, including the Mayan logbook claim in 2012, all of which were not moved down by science and ended up being false.
"Once more, there is no current confirmation that a space rock or whatever other divine item is on a direction that will effect Earth," Chodas said.
AFP
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