'Armageddon' plan needed for asteroid impacts
Page 1 of 1
'Armageddon' plan needed for asteroid impacts
In the Hollywood blockbuster "Armageddon", Bruce Willis and his co-stars are given just 18 days to destroy a vast asteroid which threatens to wipe out life on Earth – a desperately short space of time in which to save the planet.
Now scientists say the world must come up with a similar emergency plan after an asteroid whistled within a whisker of the Earth on Tuesday, only two days after it was first detected by astronomers.
Space experts claim more extensive monitoring systems and an Armageddon-style protocol must be urgently set up, with an enormous asteroid measuring 300m across expected to make an even closer pass in 2029.
The Apophis asteroid, first detected in 2004, will come within 22,000 miles (36,000km) of Earth when it passes by – nearer to the Earth than television satellites and so close it can be seen with the naked eye as a burning point in the sky.
Although there is no chance of the asteroid colliding with Earth when it passes by on Friday, April 13 of that year, there is an extremely small chance it could fall into a gravitational loop and come back to hit the planet in 2038, scientists claimed.
The asteroid which passed by this week, known as 2012 XE54, passed by about 140,000 miles from Earth – roughly half the distance to the moon.
Related Articles
Nasa: world will not end on Friday 13 Dec 2012
Mission Possible: Nasa trains astronauts to land on asteroid 13 May 2012
Massive asteroid to fly past Earth 14 Jun 2012
It measured just 36m (120ft) across, but the last known asteroid of such a size to hit Earth wiped out an area of Russian forest the size of London in 1908.
Scientists are becoming increasingly concerned about the possible impact of asteroids measuring less than 1km across, which are not typically picked up by surveying programmes and could only be detected at very short notice.
Delegates from across the world will gather at the United Nations in February to come up with a framework for earlier detection of asteroids, and a plan of action if a collision is deemed possible.
Prof Richard Crowther, chief engineer at the UK Space Agency, said: "The theory is that if you can see it soon enough, you can deal with it. What we want to avoid is dealing with something that is only a couple of years away from impact – not only for technical reasons but also on the policy front.
"Moving an asteroid's point of impact away from Britain, for example, could potentially move it towards America or Europe like a red laser moving across a map, and as that happens obviously people are going to want to have some say about where it passes."
Rather than only seeking asteroids 1km or larger in diameter, astronomers should be on the lookout for anything larger than 100m – but this would require funding from more countries than just America, which currently shoulders the burden, he said.
Firing missiles at an asteroid may not be effective, he explained, because most are loose collections of rock which could re-form again after being broken up in the explosion.
The most likely approach would be to alter the asteroid’s trajectory, by flying a probe near the asteroid and either coating one side of it with a metallic spray, to change the way the sun's light affects its orbit, or to use the weak gravitational link between the asteroid and the probe to gradually pull it off course.
NASA has already announced it intends to land a probe on an asteroid to learn more about what exotic minerals they might carry, but also to learn how to work effectively in a "microgravity" climate.
"We need to understand what these objects are made of and how we might interact with them in the future so that if we do get the 'Armageddon' scenario we could place something on the surface [knowing] it would stay there and would be able to impact on the body as a whole, not a small part of it," Prof Crowther said.
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/science/space/9746266/Armageddon-plan-needed-for-asteroid-impacts.html
Aim for the EU
Now scientists say the world must come up with a similar emergency plan after an asteroid whistled within a whisker of the Earth on Tuesday, only two days after it was first detected by astronomers.
Space experts claim more extensive monitoring systems and an Armageddon-style protocol must be urgently set up, with an enormous asteroid measuring 300m across expected to make an even closer pass in 2029.
The Apophis asteroid, first detected in 2004, will come within 22,000 miles (36,000km) of Earth when it passes by – nearer to the Earth than television satellites and so close it can be seen with the naked eye as a burning point in the sky.
Although there is no chance of the asteroid colliding with Earth when it passes by on Friday, April 13 of that year, there is an extremely small chance it could fall into a gravitational loop and come back to hit the planet in 2038, scientists claimed.
The asteroid which passed by this week, known as 2012 XE54, passed by about 140,000 miles from Earth – roughly half the distance to the moon.
Related Articles
Nasa: world will not end on Friday 13 Dec 2012
Mission Possible: Nasa trains astronauts to land on asteroid 13 May 2012
Massive asteroid to fly past Earth 14 Jun 2012
It measured just 36m (120ft) across, but the last known asteroid of such a size to hit Earth wiped out an area of Russian forest the size of London in 1908.
Scientists are becoming increasingly concerned about the possible impact of asteroids measuring less than 1km across, which are not typically picked up by surveying programmes and could only be detected at very short notice.
Delegates from across the world will gather at the United Nations in February to come up with a framework for earlier detection of asteroids, and a plan of action if a collision is deemed possible.
Prof Richard Crowther, chief engineer at the UK Space Agency, said: "The theory is that if you can see it soon enough, you can deal with it. What we want to avoid is dealing with something that is only a couple of years away from impact – not only for technical reasons but also on the policy front.
"Moving an asteroid's point of impact away from Britain, for example, could potentially move it towards America or Europe like a red laser moving across a map, and as that happens obviously people are going to want to have some say about where it passes."
Rather than only seeking asteroids 1km or larger in diameter, astronomers should be on the lookout for anything larger than 100m – but this would require funding from more countries than just America, which currently shoulders the burden, he said.
Firing missiles at an asteroid may not be effective, he explained, because most are loose collections of rock which could re-form again after being broken up in the explosion.
The most likely approach would be to alter the asteroid’s trajectory, by flying a probe near the asteroid and either coating one side of it with a metallic spray, to change the way the sun's light affects its orbit, or to use the weak gravitational link between the asteroid and the probe to gradually pull it off course.
NASA has already announced it intends to land a probe on an asteroid to learn more about what exotic minerals they might carry, but also to learn how to work effectively in a "microgravity" climate.
"We need to understand what these objects are made of and how we might interact with them in the future so that if we do get the 'Armageddon' scenario we could place something on the surface [knowing] it would stay there and would be able to impact on the body as a whole, not a small part of it," Prof Crowther said.
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/science/space/9746266/Armageddon-plan-needed-for-asteroid-impacts.html
Aim for the EU
wyatt1- ..........
- Posts : 10029
Re: 'Armageddon' plan needed for asteroid impacts
wyatt1 wrote:In the Hollywood blockbuster "Armageddon", Bruce Willis and his co-stars are given just 18 days to destroy a vast asteroid which threatens to wipe out life on Earth – a desperately short space of time in which to save the planet.
Now scientists say the world must come up with a similar emergency plan after an asteroid whistled within a whisker of the Earth on Tuesday, only two days after it was first detected by astronomers.
Space experts claim more extensive monitoring systems and an Armageddon-style protocol must be urgently set up, with an enormous asteroid measuring 300m across expected to make an even closer pass in 2029.
The Apophis asteroid, first detected in 2004, will come within 22,000 miles (36,000km) of Earth when it passes by – nearer to the Earth than television satellites and so close it can be seen with the naked eye as a burning point in the sky.
Although there is no chance of the asteroid colliding with Earth when it passes by on Friday, April 13 of that year, there is an extremely small chance it could fall into a gravitational loop and come back to hit the planet in 2038, scientists claimed.
The asteroid which passed by this week, known as 2012 XE54, passed by about 140,000 miles from Earth – roughly half the distance to the moon.
Related Articles
Nasa: world will not end on Friday 13 Dec 2012
Mission Possible: Nasa trains astronauts to land on asteroid 13 May 2012
Massive asteroid to fly past Earth 14 Jun 2012
It measured just 36m (120ft) across, but the last known asteroid of such a size to hit Earth wiped out an area of Russian forest the size of London in 1908.
Scientists are becoming increasingly concerned about the possible impact of asteroids measuring less than 1km across, which are not typically picked up by surveying programmes and could only be detected at very short notice.
Delegates from across the world will gather at the United Nations in February to come up with a framework for earlier detection of asteroids, and a plan of action if a collision is deemed possible.
Prof Richard Crowther, chief engineer at the UK Space Agency, said: "The theory is that if you can see it soon enough, you can deal with it. What we want to avoid is dealing with something that is only a couple of years away from impact – not only for technical reasons but also on the policy front.
"Moving an asteroid's point of impact away from Britain, for example, could potentially move it towards America or Europe like a red laser moving across a map, and as that happens obviously people are going to want to have some say about where it passes."
Rather than only seeking asteroids 1km or larger in diameter, astronomers should be on the lookout for anything larger than 100m – but this would require funding from more countries than just America, which currently shoulders the burden, he said.
Firing missiles at an asteroid may not be effective, he explained, because most are loose collections of rock which could re-form again after being broken up in the explosion.
The most likely approach would be to alter the asteroid’s trajectory, by flying a probe near the asteroid and either coating one side of it with a metallic spray, to change the way the sun's light affects its orbit, or to use the weak gravitational link between the asteroid and the probe to gradually pull it off course.
NASA has already announced it intends to land a probe on an asteroid to learn more about what exotic minerals they might carry, but also to learn how to work effectively in a "microgravity" climate.
"We need to understand what these objects are made of and how we might interact with them in the future so that if we do get the 'Armageddon' scenario we could place something on the surface [knowing] it would stay there and would be able to impact on the body as a whole, not a small part of it," Prof Crowther said.
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/science/space/9746266/Armageddon-plan-needed-for-asteroid-impacts.html
Aim for the EU
if only..
Guest- Guest
Similar topics
» Armageddon: so funny it deserves a thread of its own
» Paintballs Could Deflect Deadly Asteroid, Researchers Claim (VIDEO)
» Is this Nasa's most daring mission yet? Astronauts to land on asteroid three million miles from Earth - and stay for a MONTH
» Asteroid miners to clash with android Thatcher
» Nasa Plans To Lasso Asteroid And Land On It
» Paintballs Could Deflect Deadly Asteroid, Researchers Claim (VIDEO)
» Is this Nasa's most daring mission yet? Astronauts to land on asteroid three million miles from Earth - and stay for a MONTH
» Asteroid miners to clash with android Thatcher
» Nasa Plans To Lasso Asteroid And Land On It
Page 1 of 1
Permissions in this forum:
You cannot reply to topics in this forum
Sun Dec 04, 2022 11:49 pm by fatbob5
» Pork Markets
Mon Oct 24, 2022 3:56 am by fatbob5
» Why Elon Musk Couldn't Save Free Speech
Thu Aug 18, 2022 2:09 pm by fatbob5
» so..............hows the freedom jab going??
Wed Aug 03, 2022 3:44 am by fatbob5
» NOT GUILTY ON ALL COUNTS
Sat Dec 18, 2021 10:07 am by Flap Zappa
» DEAN!!!!!
Sun Nov 14, 2021 1:38 pm by smelly-bandit
» Scams becoming more sophisticated
Fri Nov 12, 2021 2:56 am by smelly-bandit
» An Interesting Tweet
Tue Oct 19, 2021 8:10 pm by smelly-bandit
» Have you seen...
Mon Oct 11, 2021 6:43 pm by Flap Zappa
» tories prepare for genocide
Thu Sep 30, 2021 4:16 pm by dragonfly
» PLANET OF THE HUMANS
Thu Sep 30, 2021 3:59 pm by dragonfly
» Blood is on bidens hands
Wed Sep 08, 2021 12:40 am by fatbob5
» A list of joe Bidens accomplishments during his 47 years in politics
Tue Aug 31, 2021 3:59 pm by smelly-bandit
» Mickey Mouse has ruined my life
Thu Aug 26, 2021 5:44 pm by Flap Zappa
» Turkish Wildfires
Sat Aug 21, 2021 10:44 pm by Flap Zappa