‘Potentially hazardous asteroid’ will make its closest-ever approach to Earth on April Fools’ Day (yes, really)

Astronomers have confirmed that a “potentially hazardous” asteroid is set to make its closest-ever approach to Earth this Friday (April 1). However, there is no need to panic; astronomers say the massive space rock will miss us by around 4.6 million miles (7.4 million kilometers).

The asteroid, known as 2007 FF1, is between 360 feet and 656 feet (110 and 260 meters) in diameter, according to SpaceReference.com, a database that compiles information from NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in California and the International Astronomical Union. The rock 2007 FF1 is known as an Apollo-class asteroid, of which there are around 15,000, meaning that its orbit around the sun (which takes 684 days) crosses with Earth’s orbit. The asteroid is classified as potentially hazardous because of its size and relatively close orbit to Earth.

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