[Home]  [Headlines]  [Latest Articles]  [Latest Comments]  [Post]  [Sign-in]  [Mail]  [Setup]  [Help] 

Status: Not Logged In; Sign In

Mike Thune calls Netanyahu First

Former CIA Agent "Iran's plot to kill Trump doesn't ADD UP"

Trump Nominates RFK Jr. For HHS Secretary

Tyrus: I wish this was a joke, but it's not

The free world’s most potent weapons against China have been crippled

The free world’s most potent weapons against China have been crippled

GOD BLESS THE USA - TRUMP MUSIC VIDEO

Landmark flight: US tanker refuels Russian jets in Malaysia

AIex Jones Studio Seized! lnfowars Website Pulled From Internet! But He's NOT Going Away!

Gutfeld: This was Kamala's Achilles' heel

BREAKING! DEEP STATE SWAMP RATS TRYING TO SABOTAGE TRUMP FROM THE INSIDE | Redacted w Clayton Morris [Livestream in progress]

The Media Flips Over Tulsi & Matt Gaetz, Biden & Trump Take A Pic, & Famous People Leave Twitter!

4 arrested in California car insurance scam: 'Clearly a human in a bear suit'

Silk Road Founder Trusts Trump To 'Honor His Pledge' For Commutation

"You DESERVED to LOSE the Senate, the House, and the Presidency!" - Jordan Peterson

"Grand Political Theatre"; FBI Raids Home Of Polymarket CEO; Seize Phone, Electronics

Schoolhouse Limbo: How Low Will Educators Go To Better Grades?

BREAKING: U.S. Army Officers Made a Desperate Attempt To Break Out of The Encirclement in KURSK

Trumps team drawing up list of Pentagon officers to fire, sources say

Israeli Military Planning To Stay in Gaza Through 2025

Hezbollah attacks Israeli army's Tel Aviv HQ twice in one day

People Can't Stop Talking About Elon's Secret Plan For MSNBC And CNN Is Totally Panicking

Tucker Carlson UNLOADS on Diddy, Kamala, Walz, Kimmel, Rich Girls, Conspiracy Theories, and the CIA!

"We have UFO technology that enables FREE ENERGY" Govt. Whistleblowers

They arrested this woman because her son did WHAT?

Parody Ad Features Company That Offers to Cryogenically Freeze Liberals for Duration of TrumpÂ’s Presidency

Elon and Vivek BEGIN Reforming Government, Media LOSES IT

Dear Border Czar: This Nonprofit Boasts A List Of 400 Companies That Employ Migrants

US Deficit Explodes: Blowout October Deficit Means 2nd Worst Start To US Fiscal Year On Record

Gaetz Resigns 'Effective Immediately' After Trump AG Pick; DC In Full Blown Panic


Science/Tech
See other Science/Tech Articles

Title: Earth is totally unprepared for a surprise asteroid strike, NASA scientists warn
Source: [None]
URL Source: http://www.sciencealert.com/earth-i ... id-strike-nasa-scientist-warns
Published: Dec 14, 2016
Author: BEC CREW
Post Date: 2016-12-14 06:51:58 by Tatarewicz
Keywords: None
Views: 109
Comments: 2

ScienceAlert...

NASA is certainly not in the business of spreading panic over asteroid strikes - every time one comes close, we see yet another press release telling us that all known 'potentially hazardous asteroids' have less than a 0.01 percent chance of impacting Earth in the next 100 years.

But with NASA detecting around five new asteroids every night, there are a whole lot out there still to be discovered, and if one happens to catch us by surprise, the only option we’ll have is to prepare for the worst.

"The biggest problem, basically, is there’s not a hell of a lot we can do about it at the moment," Joseph Nuth from NASA's Goddard Space Flight Centre said at the annual meeting of the American Geophysical Union in San Francisco this week.

What's perhaps most unsettling is we're not talking about those unexpected asteroids that we detect days or weeks out from their closest approach to Earth - it takes years to complete some kind of 'deflection' operation, so anything less than that, and all we have left to consider is mass evacuation.

To be clear, for the most part, Earth has been left alone by massive asteroids and comets.

But as Alan Yuhas reports for The Guardian, there have been two notable "close encounters" in recent years: one in 1996, when a comet collided with Jupiter; and one in 2014, which made a flyby just past Mars, our closest neighbour.

Scientists had detected that 2014 comet 22 months before it zoomed past Mars. But Nuth says even that amount of time would have been nowhere near enough to do anything about it if Earth - not Mars - was in its path.

"If you look at the schedule for high-reliability spacecraft and launching them, it takes five years to launch a spacecraft," he said. "We had 22 months of total warning."

While NASA has established an Office of Planetary Protection - manned by just one scientist as recently as two years ago - Nuth says that we’ve largely been ignoring the threat of comets in order to keep tabs on asteroids instead.

According to the Planetary Society, we have discovered roughly 60 percent of the near-Earth asteroid and short-period comets (with orbital periods of less than 200 years) that are estimated to be 1.5 kilometres or larger.

So what's the solution? Nuth and his team, who were also present at the meeting, recommend that NASA builds an intercepting spacecraft now, and keeps it in storage - just in case we need it.

They also advise that NASA builds a "simple observer spacecraft" that can be launched towards the asteroid or comet threat to give the interceptor a better idea of its orbit, movements, shape, and spin axis.

"In other words, it tells us where we’re going to be most effective in hitting it, in order to have the maximum effect and the maximum probability of deflecting that comet from impacting Earth," he said.

Nuth says if we detect an incoming asteroid or comet, and we already have a functional interceptor in storage, we could launch it within a year, which could be enough to deflect it.

"This could mitigate the possibility of a sneaky asteroid coming in from a place that’s hard to observe, like from the Sun," he said.

But we'd have little hope if we started building the spacecraft after we'd detected a threat.

Cathy Plesko, a scientist at Los Alamos National Laboratory who is not in Guth's team, told The Guardian that there are two ways these deflection operations could go: either we equip a spacecraft with a nuclear warhead, or we build a "kinetic impactor" - basically, a giant cannonball.

"Cannonball technology is actually very good technology, intercepting an object at high speed actually ends up being more effective than high explosives," she said.

There's also a bit of an elephant in the room, because with so many large objects whizzing around in space, it's almost inevitable that we're going to be hit at some point, whether it's soon, or many centuries into the future.

Guth pointed out that massive asteroids and comets - like the one that ended the reign of the non-avian dinosaurs - are extremely rare, but they're a definite possibility that we need to be better prepared for.

"[T]hey are the extinction level-type events. When you're talking about things like dinosaur killers, they’re 50 to 60 million years apart, potentially," he said.

"You could say, of course, we’re due," he quipped, "but it’s a random guess at that point."

You can watch the whole seminar below:


Poster Comment:

Deflection project far better than wasting money on a bunch of squatting thieves in ME.

Post Comment   Private Reply   Ignore Thread  


TopPage UpFull ThreadPage DownBottom/Latest

#1. To: Tatarewicz (#0)

Deflection project far better

Isn't that what Jupiter and the Moon do?

Ada  posted on  2016-12-14   8:54:50 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#2. To: Ada (#1)

Isn't that what Jupiter and the Moon do?

Yes, but not completely.

Tatarewicz  posted on  2016-12-15   2:23:49 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


TopPage UpFull ThreadPage DownBottom/Latest


[Home]  [Headlines]  [Latest Articles]  [Latest Comments]  [Post]  [Sign-in]  [Mail]  [Setup]  [Help]