試す 金 - 無料
10 INCOMING ASTEROIDS
How It Works UK
|Issue 178
Discover the near-future encounters Earth will have with passing asteroids - some more hazardous than others
As scary as an incoming asteroid may sound, it doesn’t have to mean the end of the world. It’s true space rocks sometimes collide with our planet, as happened with devastating effect 66 million years ago when a massive impact wiped out the dinosaurs. But such events are the exception rather than the rule. By astronomical standards, Earth is a very small target. Asteroids move on precisely determined orbits, so the vast majority of them simply whiz past the planet at a safe distance. Such encounters are a good thing for astronomers because they give them a chance to study asteroids at close range, and these small, rocky objects can tell us a lot about the origin and evolution of the Solar System. When the first asteroids were discovered, they were all found to lie in an ‘asteroid belt’ between the orbits of Mars and Jupiter. It’s still true today that most known asteroids are located in this region.

このストーリーは、How It Works UK の Issue 178 版からのものです。
Magzter GOLD を購読すると、厳選された何千ものプレミアム記事や、10,000 以上の雑誌や新聞にアクセスできます。
すでに購読者ですか? サインイン
How It Works UK からのその他のストーリー
How It Works UK
SPACE MINING UNCOVERED
Asteroids rich in rare elements could be harvested for their valuable contents, but the real worth may be in using them as interplanetary fuel stations
2 mins
Issue 211
How It Works UK
Human refuse is ‘kick-starting’ the domestication of raccoons
City-dwelling raccoons are showing early signs of domestication. Using photos uploaded to the citizen science platform iNaturalist, researchers found that raccoons in urban environments had shorter snouts than their rural counterparts. The difference could be one of several traits that make up 'domestication syndrome', the scientists wrote in a study published in the journal Frontiers in Zoology. Domesticated animals typically become less aggressive towards humans over time. They gradually develop a relationship in which people provide for them in exchange for resources, such as meat and milk from livestock or labour from herding dogs. That process often involves selectively breeding animals for certain desirable traits, but it doesn't always begin that way. \"I wanted to know if living in a city environment would kick-start domestication processes in animals that are currently not domesticated,\" said Raffaela Lesch, a zoologist at the University of Arkansas at Little Rock.
1 mins
Issue 211
How It Works UK
WHY THINGS ROT
How dead plants and animals decay, and how living organisms rely on this natural process to survive
3 mins
Issue 211
How It Works UK
BOOZE, BEANS AND YOUR BODY
Caffeine and alcohol are two of the world's most common drugs. But what effects does drinking them have on our brains and bodies?
5 mins
Issue 211
How It Works UK
HOW TO CLEAN A SKYSCRAPER WINDOW
Discover how skilled window cleaners with nerves of steel tackle these towering glass facades
2 mins
Issue 211
How It Works UK
ASTRONAUTS SEE COMET LEMMON 'ABSORBED' BY AURORAE
For skywatchers, scientists and even the astronauts on the International Space Station (ISS), the skies have been active. The Sun has released its largest eruptions of 2025, sparking a series of aurorae that have reached as far south as Mexico. While astronauts on the ISS had to take shelter during the recent solar storms to avoid potentially dangerous radiation, they did manage to capture this image of Comet Lemmon appearing near the aurorae on Earth.
1 min
Issue 211
How It Works UK
HOW TO MAKE MAPLE SYRUP
Your favourite pancake topping is much more than just a sugary treat made in a factory
1 mins
Issue 211
How It Works UK
A high-fibre diet may ‘rejuvenate' immune cells that fight cancer
Microbes in the gut can help the immune system fight cancer, and a fibre-rich diet may be the key to unlocking those benefits, a study in mice suggests. The immune system is a key player in the body’s battle against cancer. On the front line of this resistance are CD8+ killer T cells, a type of immune cell that marauds around tumours and then exterminates the cancerous cells. But after each successive battle, these cells become worn out and don’t find tumours as effectively. As such, treatments that provide the cells with enough pep to finish their job are in high demand.
2 mins
Issue 211
How It Works UK
SEE THE BUTTERFLY NEBULA LIKE NEVER BEFORE
On 26 November 2025, the Gemini South telescope turned 25, and astronomers celebrated its birthday with a dazzling new image of the Butterfly Nebula.
1 min
Issue 211
How It Works UK
The Gulf of Suez is pulling apart
The Gulf of Suez, which partially divides Africa and Asia, may still be widening 5 million years after we thought it had stopped.
2 mins
Issue 211
Translate
Change font size

