Asteroid Hunters
Astronomers are determined to protect human beings from inanimate outer space invaders
- By Robert Irion
- Smithsonian magazine, July-August 2010, Subscribe
(Page 4 of 4)
If Apophis did drift onto a collision course and was headed for Russia, a Russian military official said last year, his country might prepare a mission to knock it off course. But that would be premature, Yeomans says. “You have to be careful about moving asteroids around in space,” he adds, lest a deflection inadvertently steer Apophis toward Earth. “They should only be moved if they are a real threat.”
Among the groups studying how best to prevent a collision is the B612 Foundation, named for the asteroid in Antoine de Saint-Exupéry’s The Little Prince. Led by Apollo 9 astronaut Rusty Schweickart, the foundation has proposed a mission to a nonthreatening asteroid to test whether gravity from a hovering spacecraft could shift the asteroid’s orbit. “You don’t want to blow them up,” says Schweickart. “All you need to do to protect Earth is to push them gently.”
Exploding an asteroid would require deploying nuclear weapons in space, scientists say. They caution that no one knows how asteroid material would respond to such a blast. Some NEOs are thought to be loosely packed piles of rubble. One recent study suggests that a deliberate explosion would barely disperse the pieces, and they would reassemble under their own gravity.
In Yeomans’ mind, scientists have already demonstrated the best technique: ramming. In 2005, a NASA science mission called Deep Impact crashed an 816-pound copper mass into a comet to learn more about its icy interior. If scientists were to detect a 600-foot-wide asteroid ten years in advance, Yeomans says, it could be deflected with a two-ton projectile traveling six miles per second. He says that’s enough to make it miss the Earth. Barely.
But given the limited number of astronomers and the small telescopes scanning the sky for asteroid threats, says Yeomans, we probably won’t see a small incoming object until it’s just a week or two away from hitting us. “In that case,” he says, “all you can do is evacuate.”
Robert Irion has written about comets, black holes, new planets and other astronomical phenomena for Smithsonian.
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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