7 Best Christmas Tree Stands in 2022

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Believe it or not, a Christmas tree won't stay upright on its own. Instead, you need a stable Christmas tree stand that can accommodate the type and size of tree you have. We researched dozens of the best Christmas tree stands to help you find the right one for your needs, whether you have a real tree, an artificial tree, a small tree, or a behemoth. The stands in our guide have a track record of durability, performance, and easy setup. We also outline the size and type of tree each stand is meant for. Check out our guide to the best Christmas tree skirts once you've chosen the right stand for your tree. The best Christmas tree stands in 2022 Best Christmas tree stand overall: Krinner Tree Genie Christmas Tree Stand, available at Amazon, $82.79 The German-engineered Krinner Tree Genie Christmas Tree Stand is easy to set up in a couple of minutes and keeps trees up to 12 f...

Bet You Can't Spot the Elusive 'Christmas Asteroid'

Image for article titled Bet You Can't Spot the Elusive 'Christmas Asteroid'

Photo: Vadim Sadovski (Shutterstock)

The European Space Agency has a challenge for you: Spot asteroid 2015 RN35. They’re calling it the “Christmas Asteroid,” and it’s in view of much of the earth from December 15 through December 19, if you have a telescope and know where to look.

The space rock is roughly the size of the Pyramid of Giza, and at 3:12 a.m. ET tonight it will be at its closest point to earth, speeding by only 430,000 or so miles from us (about twice the distance to our moon). This is as close as the object will get to the planet for the next decade.

How to see the Christmas Asteroid

Unlike the Star of Bethlehem that announced the birth of Our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ, the Christmas Asteroid will not light up the sky. Even though it will fly close to us in asteroid terms, you’ll need a telescope of at least 11 inches to see it. To help you spot it (and other near-earth objects), the European Space Agency’s Near-Earth Object Coordination Centre (NEOCC) has released a suite of free tools for asteroid-heads that let you visualize the orbits of near-earth objects, simulate their approaches, and plan when you can see and photograph them from anywhere on earth. For a quicker look at the object’s current location relative to your own location, check out The LiveSky’s page. You can enter your city and get all the astronomical coordinates for 2015 RN35.

If you’re not going to go to all that trouble, you can still see the asteroid online. The European Space Agency is encouraging amateur astronomers to photograph the Christmas Asteroid and post pictures on social media using the hashtag #ESAChristmasAsteroid.

The mystery and danger of asteroids like 2015 RN35

While astronomers have plotted the rough orbit of asteroid 2015 RN35 and feel confident that it’s not going to crash into the earth in the near future, that’s about all we know. We don’t know what it’s made of, its exact orbit, exactly how big it is, whether it’s spinning, or whether it’s actually a disguised spaceship and the Space Brothers are finally bringing us home.

The Christmas Asteroid is one of hundreds of thousands of mid-sized space rocks that fly by us regularly. Scientists know a lot about bigger, planet-killing objects, but the smaller ones are not as well understood. The hope is that plotting them could lead to knowing when and where they might strike earth—even a smaller asteroid hitting the planet could be devastating, even if it doesn’t wipe out all life.

https://www.tausiinsider.com/bet-you-cant-spot-the-elusive-christmas-asteroid/?feed_id=328028&_unique_id=641a5a2e16a9e

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