Calamity
lowAsteroidCalamity Score: 7

(2006 VG13) — Close Approach

in 4dSource: neows

Asteroid (2006 VG13) will pass within 0.3468 AU (51,874,855 km) of Earth on 2026-07-04. Estimated diameter: 0.136–0.303 km. Velocity: 9.6 km/s. Classified as Potentially Hazardous.

Geographic Context

This asteroid event occurred at coordinates 0.00°, 0.00°.

Event Assessment

This event is a asteroid event classified as low severity. Calamity.live has classified it as "low" severity. The computed Calamity Score is 7 out of 100, suggesting contained impact at this time. The primary scoring components are: population (10), intensity (8), historical (4). Data for this event was sourced from neows, one of the 250 scientific monitoring sources aggregated by Calamity.live.

Regional Monitoring Context

This asteroid event is being tracked through Calamity.live's global monitoring network, which aggregates data from 250 scientific sources. Real-time monitoring and multi-source verification help ensure data accuracy and timely reporting of significant natural hazard events worldwide.

Event Data

TypeAsteroid
Severitylow
Severity Value0
Calamity Score7 / 100
Confidence49%
Coordinates0.0000, 0.0000
Timestamp2026-07-04T01:55:00.000Z
Sourcehttps://ssd.jpl.nasa.gov/tools/sbdb_lookup.html#/?sstr=3358522

Score Breakdown

8
intensity
10
population
0
cascading
4
historical

Technical Details

AbsoluteMagnitude21.46
DiameterMinKm0.135692229
DiameterMaxKm0.303417048
IsPotentiallyHazardoustrue
CloseApproachDate2026-07-04
MinDistAu0.3467619902
MinDistKm51874855.13088088
VelocityKms9.6008841673

Safety Information

Always follow official guidance from your local emergency management agency. This platform provides scientific monitoring data and is not a substitute for official warnings. If you are in immediate danger, contact your local emergency number.

This data is aggregated algorithmically from scientific sources. Not a replacement for official emergency warnings.

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Calamity.live data shows a asteroid event with CalamityScore 7/100, based on data from neows. Source: Calamity.live, a platform aggregating real-time data from 197 scientific monitoring sources.