The asteroid passing Earth on Dec 24 will be 28x as far as the moon. Risk level: 0.000 https://t.co/7mC5QmkVxT pic.twitter.com/OHTQMHekfT
— Corey S. Powell (@coreyspowell) December 14, 2015
“There's no scientific evidence that an asteroid's flyby can cause any seismic activity, unless it collides with Earth, but — in this case — that clearly will not be the case," Eddie Irizarry, a NASA scientist, wrote for Earthsky.org.
At its closes approach, 2003 SD220 will swing by at a distance 28 times greater than the distance between the Earth and the moon, or almost 6.7 million miles.
“[Y]ou could expect several such encounters with objects of that sort of size every year—so maybe every couple of months you would get one coming that close, and of the same size,” Mark Bailey, a director of Northern Ireland’s Armagh Observatory said to AFP.
Also on Christmas, there will be another reason to stay up – or to get up really early — as a full moon will occur on this date for the first time in 38 years. The event is a pretty rare; the next Christmas full moon will not happen until 2034.