Asteroid Hunters
Astronomers are determined to protect human beings from inanimate outer space invaders
- By Robert Irion
- Smithsonian magazine, July-August 2010, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 4)
In one sense, spotting the incoming asteroid was a triumph, because it demonstrated that astronomers can detect even a small projectile heading our way. But the feat was also sobering, because they saw it too late to do anything about it. Hill and his fellow NEO hunters hope to detect large asteroids sooner, preferably years or decades in advance.
“It’s the only natural disaster we can stave off,” says Don Yeomans, manager of NASA’s NEO command center at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) in Pasadena, California.
Oddballs of the solar system, asteroids are battered chunks of rock and metal that have tumbled around the heavens since the Sun’s eight major planets (plus demoted Pluto) formed about 4.6 billion years ago. Astronomers have cataloged about a half-million asteroids, most in the gap between the orbits of Mars and Jupiter. About 7,000 known NEOs loop wildly among the inner planets, following paths that shift in response to gravity and the Sun’s heat. “Their orbits are all over the place,” says Paul Chodas of JPL. “They’re rebels.”
In the desert 175 miles north of Tucson, Meteor Crater is the scar where a boxcar-size hunk of iron slammed into Earth 50,000 years ago. The crater is nearly a mile wide and 550 feet deep, edged with layers of warped and shattered rock. The asteroid blew up with the energy of the largest hydrogen bombs ever detonated on Earth, vaporizing the desert and unleashing deadly supersonic winds for many miles. I visited the crater as night fell, and I felt keenly aware that fragments of the solar system can invade our cozy realm of Earth and Moon.
If a 100-foot-wide asteroid hit Earth, the shock wave from its explosion in the atmosphere could flatten trees and kill every large animal for hundreds of square miles. That’s just what happened in 1908 at Tunguska, Siberia. The odds are roughly one in ten that such a blast will occur in the next 40 years. An asteroid 500 feet across could destroy a metropolitan area or spawn massive tsunamis. Those impacts occur every 30,000 years, on average.
Hundreds of known NEOs are more than a mile wide. If an asteroid that big struck Earth, firestorms could produce worldwide clouds of soot that would block sunlight and plunge the planet into an “asteroid winter.” That happens every few million years, scientists estimate. Once every 100 million years or so, an even larger asteroid may cause a mass extinction; most scientists believe a six-mile-wide asteroid doomed the dinosaurs 65 million years ago.
Astronomers with the Catalina survey find new NEOs almost every night. They start by taking four pictures of the same patch of sky, with ten minutes between each exposure, and compare them on a computer screen. While background stars shine in the same place in each image, NEOs appear as four distinct dots along a straight line. The astronomers are skilled at ruling out man-made satellites, electronic sparks from cosmic rays and other streaking objects that could be mistaken for an NEO. “They look at everything with the human eye,” NASA’s Yeomans says. “They’ve been doing it for so long, and they’re so dedicated.”
Hill, who has used telescopes since he was a child during the Sputnik era, has been on the team since 1999. He has found more comets—22—than all but three other people in history. (Comets usually originate in the outer solar system and are less common in Earth’s neighborhood than asteroids.) During my visit to Mount Lemmon, he made a trumpeting noise just before he pointed out the first NEO to us. “I love what I do,” he says. “I would do this for free.”
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Comments (5)
revelations 18 says new york will be hit by an asteroid.
Posted by skeatesy on April 3,2012 | 07:45 AM
you have done a great job at this. Thank god for you guys.. Keep it up =) god bless
Posted by stacy claire on July 15,2010 | 10:48 PM
Because NEO's are infrequent impactors, they could be taken lightly - at our considerable peril. With Gene Shoemaker I mapped the Wabar impact site in Saudi Arabia. Using software provided by the UofA's Jay Melosh, we showed that a garage-sized object became a kinetic energy bomb, delivering more energy than the Hiroshima atomic device. Besides excavating three craters, it spread a rain of molten glass at least a kilometer away. A garage-sized object can be a real "city buster."
Posted by Jeff Wynn on July 14,2010 | 10:52 AM
Great article.
What a cool job!
Imagine the things that you can see with those telescopes.
It is good to know that we have people doing things like this.
http://www.forestwander.com/the-sky/
Posted by ForestWander Nature Photography on July 12,2010 | 07:58 PM
Awesome article! If you want to learn more about the search for NEO's, check out more about the Catalina Sky Survey at the University of Arizona.
http://www.uanews.org/node/23269
Posted by Will on July 8,2010 | 03:13 PM