Near-Earth objects and close calls

Is it just me, or are there a lot of fireballs falling over Spain recently?
I think they just have a very good system, with cameras monitoring their skies and several accounts (youtube, twitter, etc). Meteroides.net is always filming and reporting trajectories of bolides and the like in their skies. They're very well organized, with people sending them their films. It creates a bias of fireballs over Spain. Before used to be Puerto Rico, but during the last years, they either closed shop or their system is not as good as it used to.
 
It's a hit for James McCanney, who is being talking and writing about the censorship and restrictions for decades.
He explains it in this video with relation to the 3I/ATLAS passage of Mars.
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They're very well organized, with people sending them their films. It creates a bias of fireballs over Spain. Before used to be Puerto Rico, but during the last years, they either closed shop or their system is not as good as it used to.
Another aspect is the number of hours with sunshine, which is representative of the hours that one can observe stars. From this site, there is:
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Close calls, but still non-zero possibility of getting hit. The danger comes from comets and their indirect effects in the solar system.

xras.ru

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The largest kilometer-sized asteroid in the last year will fly by on February 14 at a safe distance from Earth.

Asteroid 162882 (2001 FD58) with a size close to 1 km (the estimate is in the range from 0.5 to 1 km), will pass on Saturday, February 14 at a distance of several million kilometers from Earth. The object is the largest that has flown over the past year in a zone with a radius of 7.5 million kilometers around the planet, hitting which automatically classifies the body as potentially dangerous. At the same time, the asteroid does not pose a real threat to the Earth and stands out solely by its size. The probability of a body colliding with a planet is considered to be zero.

The nearest large object, which, according to estimates by the European Space Agency, has a non—zero probability of falling to Earth, is the asteroid 2017 SH33, also with a size of about 1 kilometer, for which, according to simulation results, there is about 1 chance in 150 million to fall to Earth on April 30 this year.

According to the same data, the 10-meter stone 2013 TP4 has the highest probability of colliding with the planet this year. With a 1 in about 45,000 chance, this could happen on October 1, 2026. However, closer to the X hour, this probability is also likely to decrease to the level of statistical error.

The greatest danger to the Earth this year, as always, will be random objects arriving from the far reaches of the Solar System and being discovered for the first time. An example of such an object would be 3I/ATLAS, a body over 1 km in size that was discovered just 5 months before its closest approach to Earth. This shows well how unexpectedly objects can appear, even of such a large size, and how little time the planet has left to respond to the threat of a collision if it suddenly turns out to be real.

The largest meteorites that fell to Earth, leading to mass extinction of species and changes in geological epochs, are believed to have been 10-20 km in size.
For comparison, the size of the Chelyabinsk meteorite was about 20 meters, and the size of the fireball observed north of Moscow on October 27 last year (Лаборатория солнечной астрономии (XRAS) ), about 1 meter.
 
Avi Loeb, a Baird Professor of Science at Harvard University, studies interstellar objects and estimates the interstellar dust related to his research.

Feb 11, 2026
A Swarm of 35-Million Interstellar Objects Was Just Discovered Within the Earth’s Orbit Around the Sun.
What's Up: February 2026 Skywatching Tips from NASA
Jan 30, 2026
0:00 Intro
0:14 Artemis II launch window opens
0:45 Orion the Hunter
1:23 A planetary parade
2:05 February Moon phases
Additional information about topics covered in this episode of What's Up, along with still images from the video, and the video transcript, are available at https://science.nasa.gov/skywatching/....

Comets Visible in February​

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By Pepe Chambó, Monday, February 9, 2026
Dialog In Spanish
 
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