PropertyValue
?:author
?:datePublished
  • 2017-01-26 (xsd:date)
?:headline
  • Will a Doomsday Asteroid Destroy Earth in February 2017? (en)
?:inLanguage
?:itemReviewed
?:mentions
?:reviewBody
  • On 25 January 2017, the Daily Mail published a report with the terrifying headline: A doomsday asteroid will hit Earth next month and trigger devastating mega-tsunamis, claims conspiracy theorist. If ever you wanted a textbook example of the balance fallacy (when two sides of an argument are represented as having comparable value regardless of their merits), or of revenue-driven, shameless pseudoscientific clickbait, this would be the place to see it in the wild. On one side of the debate you have NASA, the National Aeronautics and Space Administration. It is a large collection of professionally trained scientists, some of whom have spent decades specifically studying the science of asteroid tracking, engineers who are trained to operate multi-million dollar instruments to perform said tracking, and offices whose sole purpose is to monitor the trajectory of near earth objects. This organization’s NEOWISE mission detected an object dubbed 2016 WF9 on 27 November 2016. After collecting enough data on its orbit, they reported that it was no threat to Earth on 29 December 2016: On the other side of the debate (as framed by the Daily Mail), you have Self-proclaimed Russian astronomer Dr Dyomin Damir Zakharovich who says NASA is lying, and that it will hit Earth on 16 February 2017: The UK tabloid Metro also reported on this mysterious astronomer: Two quick notes on the Zakharovich hypothesis. The Nibiru system refers to an as yet undetected planet in the outer reaches of our solar system, whose name is rooted in a misreading of ancient Babylonian texts, and which has been the basis for myriad predictions (many of which have come and gone) of our civilization's ultimate demise. While an undetected planet may well exist in our solar system, there is a fairly specific area in which it would be found, and nothing leaving that distant region of space in October is going to be hitting us this February — even if it were on the right trajectory. Second, even the Daily Mail seems to think the man on whom they have based their entire article may not exist: What we do know for sure, though, is that all available data suggests it is not a risk to our planet. That data is sufficient enough for NASA to have mapped out a Lonely Planet-caliber tour guide for its trip through the inner solar system: (en)
?:reviewRating
rdf:type
?:url