What's more serious ? - climate change or an asteroid collision ? - I know what worries me more Astronomers Seek Ways to Divert 'Killer Asteroids' that Could Threaten Earth | |
San Francisco 14 March 2007 |
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Asteroids like this have hit the Earth before and could again |
An asteroid striking Earth is more than just a theoretical worry or, for that matter, the plot of a Bruce Willis movie. Asteroids have hit our home planet repeatedly. A century ago, an asteroid flattened 2,000 square kilometers of a sparsely-populated area in Siberia, a relatively local event. But 65 million years ago, an asteroid estimated at just 10 to 15 kilometers across slammed into what is now Mexico. Then, it killed off the dinosaurs. Today, it would wipe out human civilization.
A systematic survey of the skies to identify threatening objects that cross Earth's orbit could cost a billion dollars, money NASA plans to spend on other projects.
But even without a systematic survey of the sky, astronomers have occasionally stumbled on objects heading our way. One that looked particularly dangerous is an asteroid known as Apophis.
Steven Chesley of the Jet Propulsion Laboratory in California says there are 20,000 asteroids yet to be discovered |
So they'll continue to keep an eye on Apophis. Meanwhile, NASA has identified about 130 asteroids that might hit the Earth. But Chesley says there are an estimated 20,000 yet to be discovered.
So what happens if, one day, astronomers announce that they've discovered a distant asteroid heading right for Earth? Over the years, scientists -- and science fiction writers -- have come up with various solutions. You've probably seen them in the movies. But a more elegant proposal comes from astronaut and physicist Ed Lu, who explains his idea for a gravity tractor to nudge an asteroid out of a collision orbit.
Physcist Ed Lu has an idea for a gravity tractor to nudge an asteroid out of a collision orbit |
And when Ed Lu says a very long time, he's talking about years, or even decades.
Former astronaut Rusty Schweickart says we should be prepared for a collision |
NASA's David Morrison says we now have data on real asteroids |
Which is why scientists stress the need to search the skies for asteroids that might be halfway across the solar system now, but could pose a civilization-ending threat to Earth in the decades to come.
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