LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - They‘re not exactly like „Armageddon“ or „Deep Impact“ and they don‘t pose any immediate threat, but U.S. space scientists said Wednesday they have discovered two real asteroids heading in Earth‘s direction. Unlike this summer‘s big-budget Hollywood movies, these asteroids are not expected to come anywhere near Earth‘s orbit for at least several decades. The two asteroids, each of them at least one mile (1.6 km) across, have been classified as „potentially hazardous objects“ by the NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) in Pasadena, California because they are large enough to cause global effects if they hit Earth. But JPL scientists say careful analysis with the Near Earth Asteroid Tracking (NEAT) system — set up just last month to detect any potential dangerous space rocks — shows that neither object poses an immediate threat. Project scientist Eleanor Helin said: „The discovery of these two asteroids illustrates how NEAT is doing precisely what it is supposed to do.“ She said the asteroids passed within 3.5 million km of Earth during their last orbit.