Apophis Strikes Earth: Odds still 1 in 45,000

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The discussion centers on the asteroid Apophis and its projected odds of impacting Earth, currently estimated at 1 in 45,000. Several participants critique the quality of journalism surrounding the asteroid's risk, arguing that the density of geostationary satellites is not as high as suggested, making a collision unlikely. The mathematical analysis indicates that Apophis will not approach the geostationary orbit closely enough to pose a significant threat. Additionally, the dynamics of Apophis's trajectory differ greatly from those of satellites, further reducing the likelihood of an impact. Overall, the consensus is that fears regarding Apophis hitting Earth are overstated.
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This is sort of in response to an article Ivan posted in the locked Apophis thread:
http://www.physorg.com/news127499715.html

The above is the url from Ivan.

Below are urls to the contrary

http://www.theregister.co.uk/2008/04/16/esa_german_schoolboy_apophis_denial/?rss
http://cosmos4u.blogspot.com/2008/04/apophis-risk-not-increased-science-fair.html

http://neo.jpl.nasa.gov/news/news158.html This is an example of very, very, shoddy journalism.
 
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Even if the asteroid did pass through the zone occupied by geostationary satellites, the density isn't really all that high. I can't imagine that it would have that much of a chance of hitting one.
 
russ_watters said:
Even if the asteroid did pass through the zone occupied by geostationary satellites, the density isn't really all that high. I can't imagine that it would have that much of a chance of hitting one.

Indeed! I'd say the odds are less than 1 in 45,000 that that would happen.
 
This must be answered by using mathematics, not aguing.
 
I keep hearing stuff about how crowded that orbit is. Is it really that vacant? What is the avarage distance between those satelites?
 
First, Apophis won't even come close to the projection of Earth's equator out to geostationary altitude. Second, even if it did, there is a big difference between Apophis and satellites at geostationary altitude that are not quite geosynchronous anymore. Apophis will come barreling through at hyperbolic speed, and do so once. Those not-quite-geosynchronous satellites have a chance to hit each and every geosynchronous satellite, and have that chance many times over.
 
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