Anything big enough that's already in the atmosphere is a massive risk for millions. We need to "push" such objects ideally from behind or from the side millions of miles away from earth to avoid any impact.Of extreme relevance. I've not googled the effect of atmosphere on incidence though. Shallow angles can be deflected. Steeper angles create a lot of friction (help to burn up objects). Straight on would be like a cosmic punch.
Well not quite, I'm talking a hypothetical weapon which can take care of any matter & yes it's still science fantasy right now. But keeping in mind a 10,000 mile radius asteroid could wipe us out next century, or even within our lifetimes, anti matter probably is our best choice for now. Talking about a really extreme edge case.I think you two are arguing over semantics, on the same side of agreement.
There's enough computational power available today to possibly alter its path but IMO not enough firepower, even we combine all our current nukes.