Answer:
The sidebar tells us what Earth scientists are actually doing about the risk of an asteroid impact.
Explanation:
The main part of the page discusses how frequently the moon is hit by rocks; how most rocks are too small to make it past Earth's atmosphere; how the rocks that do make it all the way to Earth's surface are usually pretty small and don't hit anything important; how screwed we would be if a massive rock – like an asteroid – made it to Earth's surface.
The sidebar says that scientists are understandably worried enough about these asteroids – they "feel the danger is to great to ignore" – so they're keeping a lookout for asteroids that might be on a collision course with Earth.
<h2><em>Every day when I was a kid I’d drop anything I was doing, no matter what it was—stealing wire, having a fistfight, siphoning gas—no matter what, and tear like a blue streak through the alleys, over fences, under porches, through secret shortcuts, to get home not a second too late for the magic time. My breath rattling in wheezy gasps, sweating profusely from my long cross-country run I’d sit glassy-eyed and expectant before our Crosley Notre Dame Cathedral model radio</em></h2><h2><u><em /></u></h2><h2><u><em>HOPE IT HELPS </em></u></h2><h2><u><em>THANK YOU </em></u></h2>
Probably small group judging by the other answers . Hope I can help.
This passage has a melancholic mood. You can tell this due to some specific key words: "dull", "dark", "soundless." They all have a negative connotation. The imagery of a lone rider in a dreary and dull country under the oppressive sky may clue you in that the overall passage has a sad tone to it. Even later in the passage the author states that the scene is melancholic.
1. They rushed to the hospital, but they were too late.
2. I must find a new job because I am unemployed.
3. You can eat chocolates, and you can take fresh juice.
4. They ate lunch after they had visited the museum.
Please mark me brainiest! :)