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Space

Space Object May Be Killer - In 2030 138

Somewhere in the chorus, Bandwidth_ writes: "Time to start stockpiling those beans and working on your Y2K shelter again. Astronomers have confirmed that object 2000 SG344 has a 500-to-1 chance of hitting earth in the year 2030, a much higher probability of impact than any object before it. Scientists aren't certain what it is, but it's most likely a tiny asteroid or it could be a leftover Apollo rocket booster. It is not a major threat, damage would be contained to a localized area in the 1 to 3 megaton range if a collision were to ever happen." As jamie points out, this probably ought not worry you unduly, but it is the first nonzero-rated object on the Torino scale. N2UX points to an MSNBC article on the object which points out that the threat has now been downgraded to a more comforting level.

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Space Object May Be Killer - In 2030

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  • by Sara Chan ( 138144 ) on Saturday November 04, 2000 @01:02PM (#648964)
    While the world's media outlets are still sending out sensationalist headlines about the latest asteroid scare, new precovery data discovered only hours after yesterday's alert has all but eliminated the 2030 impact scenario pulished last night by the IAU [iau.org] and NASA. According to new calculations undertaken by the NEODys (Near Earth Objects--Dynamic Site) team in Pisa this morning, the unidentified object with the designation 2000SG344 will miss the Earth in September 2030 by at least 3 million miles.

    Taking into account new precovery data of the object taken by the Catalina Sky Survey on 17 May 1999 (see http://cfa-www.harvard.edu/mpec/ K00 /K00V15.html [harvard.edu]), the NEODys team has calculated that the 2030 impact scenario is no longer real (see http://ne wto n.dm.unipi.it/cgi-bin/neodys/neoibo?objects:2000SG 344;main [unipi.it].)

    As a result of the new data, there has been a dramatic improvement in the orbital uncertainty. In fact, the nominal miss distance for this object is now given as 0.0346 AU on 22 September 2000 (22.89 UT22.19). What this means is that the object will come no closer to the Earth in 2030 than 3 million miles! In other words, the claim that this object may hit the Earth in 2030 has now been completely ruled out - less than 34 hours after the IAU and NASA decided to announce a "significant impact risk" to the world.

    It was unwise of the IAU and NASA to rely on the 1999 one-night stand data by the LINEAR team. The IAU/NASA impact announcement was premature and alarmist.

    (Thanks to B. J. Peiser for the above.)

  • by Ether Trogg ( 17457 ) on Saturday November 04, 2000 @07:26PM (#648965) Homepage
    You have an interesting theory there, however, I have a few questions:

    1.) How exactly would microwaving an asteroid help us?

    2.) Where would you get a microwave oven that large?

    3.) I was not aware that piss was alive, and if it is, why would I want to celebrate?

    4.) Why do you want to blow an asteroid? Granted, it's a sexual deviancy that probably hasn't been tried before, but sheesh! What next? "Alt.pictures.erotica.blowjobs.asteroid"?

    5.) Who's Nuff and why should we pay attention to what he said?

  • Uhhh... how is something *not* colliding with the Earth going to kill a lot of people?

  • Yeah, and it really sucks when they get a segfault. The HST starts taking pictures of George W. Bush's naked butt!

    Ugh!

  • Do we need the sign bit? I was always under the impression that time_t was an unsigned long:

    #ifndef _TIME_T
    #define _TIME_T
    typedef long time_t;
    #endif

    Hmm... maybe not. :-)

  • A few complicating factors show up, too. If the object isn't coming straight down (almost certainly it isn't), it will be hitting the atmosphere at an angle. Depending on the angle and the density of the object, the impact point can shift thousands of miles. A real life example is the reentry of umanned spacecraft. They hit the atmosphere at *very* low angles, so, even though we know the orbits of these object well enough to predict their positions to within meters, by the time they reach the ground we can't even predict where they'll hit within hundreds of kilometers. An object like this potential asteroid, where we don't know the orbit to anything like the same accuracy leaves the predictions with results like "it'll hit around 33 degrees north latitude somewhere within a few thousand kilometers of 25 degrees west longitude". The predictions will be probability graphs across a map of the world. One of the biggest uncertainties is the density of the object.
  • My browser just ping-pongs between two different MSNBC web servers and refuses to load a page.

    <plug> click here: http://slashdot.org/article. pl? sid=00/11/02/1639247 [slashdot.org] -- my first accepted slashdot story. Too bad it's old news and didn't make the front page. :-) <plug>

  • > ...damage would be contained to a localized
    > area in the 1 to 3 megaton range if a collision
    > were to ever happen.

    Seems odd to measure the "localized area" in "Megatons".

    Appears to be yet another sample of that new "goals 2000" english the White House is so proud of.


  • Who cares if an asteroid impacts the Earth in 2070 if humanity has exhausted both it's fresh water and fossil fuel supplies? What about pollution, the ozone hole, or global warming?

    People will read a story about an expected asteroid impact in 70 years, and think, "Hmm, well, that's far enough away we don't need to worry yet." Or, "We need to build a defense system for our planet!"

    The problem is that if you put it off, who knows what will be happening in the future. If you're in the middle of a global war, famine, water shortage, etc. how much time will get spent on trying to protect the planet from incoming asteroids? Or, let's say we build a global defense for interstellar objects... then when the nations of earth go to war and annihilate each other trying to acquire the last of the planet's fossil fuels, the defense we built will have nothing to left to defend.

    Having a "long term" outlook on the state of the world means looking 100 years or more into the future, and trying to plan your actions so future generations will benefit. You can start by taking public transit to work tomorrow, or being more conscious of your use of water resources. Then when the asteroid comes to destroy humanity, at least we'll still be around to be concerned about it.
  • While the new orbital calculations have ruled out the 2030 event, they have also increased the likelihood of encounters in years after 2030....

    Well, duh! :-) If the object collided with Earth in 2030, the chance of encounters after 2030 would have been zero. By not hitting Earth in 2030, the likelihood of encounters after 2030 have increased from zero to something greater than zero...

    "Lies, damn lies, and statistics"
  • ... and those dates are near 2039 ... maybe those darn nasa scientists should upgrade their systems to a 64bit architecture now ... And we wont have problems in the next <bignum> years :)

    --
  • Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • Cause it's all encrusted with that fungus that is growing on MIR . . . 'cept this time it's had 30 years to grow instead of 15

  • "10 The third angel sounded his trumpet, and a great star, blazing like a torch, fell from the sky on a third of the rivers and on
    the springs of water--
    11 the name of the star is Wormwood. [1] A third of the waters turned bitter, and many people died from the waters that had
    become bitter."

    Hmmmmmmmm....
  • Every MSNBC link that's posted here in /. doesn't work for me. My browser just ping-pongs between two different MSNBC web servers and refuses to load a page. Does anyone have a link which actually works?

    Technical details: Netscape 4.72 on Solaris, running w/ cookies off, behind two layers of proxy (one Junkbuster, one corporate). It also fails to work on my machine at home (Netscape 4.7x on Linux, proxied through Junkbuster only).

    Unhelpful comments about using a crappy browser gleefully ignored.

    --Joe
    --
    Program Intellivision! [schells.com]
  • by gburgyan ( 28359 ) on Saturday November 04, 2000 @01:09PM (#648979) Homepage
    Take a look at this article [msnbc.com]. The asteroid isn't going to come near us until at least 2070, so we don't have much to worry about quite yet.

    "One day after sounding an alert, astronomers said additional data had eliminated any chance that a recently discovered space object would collide with Earth in 2030. The revised forecast shows the object passing no closer than 3 million miles. "We're still watching it, but the 2030 event is not a concern anymore."

    News changes quickly these day, eh?

    George!

  • After the Y2K media hype, I think that(the media) will get a hard time making a doomsday issue again(sorry you have to find another angle to attract viewers/readers). People will just say,"hey, look at that Y2K thing, nothing happened"

    Of course the difference here is that with the Y2K thing, a lot of time and money was used to prevent it, not just monitor it. :-)
    --------
  • It's worth noting that nearly all asteroids have a much greater chance of laning in the ocean. Since the earth's surface is 80% water. Although tsunami's would suck just as much.
  • an MSNBC article on the object (...) points out that the threat has now been downgraded to a more comforting level.

    It's a good thing we can trust them to tell the truth; after all, Big Brother would certainly consider it worth the risk of causing a huge panic by telling us the truth if they really did think we were in potential danger...right?

    - HunterZ
  • So, life is short, well live it! We shouldn't bother about it knowing that this space object will only fall down by the year 2030. I don't really care about it, knowing I'll be hitting 47, working in a office and having a monotone life. Anyway, by that time, well, things will change a LOT : The volume of liquid water will be grater than those days due to planet warming, parks will destroyed, people will kill each other massively, but the best thing will certainly be that all kind of "OS" that Microsoft makes will be forgotten or put in museums next to war equipements, showing to future kids the error humanity contracted during the last 40 years!
  • After being kidnapped by aliens, they kicked him out after a lot of whiskey and too many renditions of Heartbreak Hotel.
  • Well, check the link to http://www.msnbc.com/news/485240.asp?0nm=-21C
    they got a cute little flash animation that basically shows that it's a wedge shaped area.

    Also, they say that the guy who announced the 1 in 500 and then downgraded it said that they are supposed to issue warnings within 72 hours after first noticing a possible threat and that it took them 80 hours to finish crunching the data.
    He claims that to be the reason for the initial wrong warning and why their initial statement was way out of range.
    Guess they are trying to point out that they need bigger supercomps and more funding?
    ...
  • "Never trust a statistic that you have not forged yourself"
    attributed to Rockefeller [sen.]
  • by gunner800 ( 142959 ) on Saturday November 04, 2000 @12:25PM (#648987) Homepage
    With the new data, we can say that the closest the object can approach the Earth in 2030 is 11 lunar distances on September 23....

    While the new orbital calculations have ruled out the 2030 event, they have also increased the likelihood of encounters in years after 2030....

    The media attention was due to an early announcement; NASA is no longer saying that there is any chance in 2030. There is, however, a 1-in-1000 chance in 2071.

    Please click links in stories before posting.


    My mom is not a Karma whore!

  • Don't be fooled, it's the feather and the stone...
    In space, it matters little what your size is, as there's bugger all drag (which is proportional to area facing the flow).

    However, the issue of how far they can wind forward a >2 body problem is pertinent.
    I guess if they're giving probabilities, they must have worked out some kind of a bell-curve, a probability map of where it could be in space. We just have to assume that the perturbation theorists have given the prediction the thumbs up.

    FatPhil
  • by stewart.hector ( 87816 ) on Saturday November 04, 2000 @01:22PM (#648989) Homepage
    according to a news story on bbc on-line, this is alarmist, and the object will miss Earth in 2030.

    The link:
    http://news.bbc.co.uk/hi/english/sci/tech/newsid _1006000/1006305.stm

    The story:
    Astronomers say reports that the Earth would be struck by a small asteroid in 2030 were wildly exaggerated.

    Less than a day after sounding the alert about asteroid 2000SG344 a revised analysis of its orbit says it will in fact miss the Earth by three million miles.

    Astronomers are still watching the object, which was discovered in September and thought to be a mile (0.6 km) across.

    Some scientists have criticised the way the information was released before it had been thoroughly confirmed.

    Threat rating

    Asteroid 2000SG344 was the first object to have a threat rating of greater than zero on the 0-10 Torino scale of threatening object from space.

    It was discovered on 29 September by astronomers David Tholen
    and Robert Whiteley using the Canada-France-Hawaii 3.6-metre
    telescope on the island of Hawaii.

    Shortly thereafter, pre-discovery observations taken in May 1999
    by the Linear sky survey were also identified.

    On Friday the International Astronomical Union issued an alert
    saying that the object had about a 1 in 500 chance of striking the
    Earth on 21 September 2030.

    No object has ever been rated with so high a chance of impact.

    Had it struck our planet the results would have been devastating, an
    explosion greater than the most powerful nuclear weapon.

    Sky survey data

    After the announcement astronomers began looking at sky survey
    data to see if the object had been picked up but not recognised in
    earlier observations.

    It was found and its past position allowed a more accurate
    calculation of its orbit to be made.

    The result: in 2030 it will miss us by three million miles, or 12 times
    further away than the Moon.

    The new orbit reveals a slight risk of a collision with the Earth about
    2071 but it is thought that when the orbit is better known that risk
    will disappear as well.

    Currently asteroid 2000SG344 is about nine million miles (15 million
    km) away and getting more distant.

    'Premature and alarmist'

    Because 2000SG344 is in a similar orbit to the Earth it has been
    suggested that it might be an old Saturn upper stage rocket of the
    type that was used in the early Apollo moon missions.

    If it is man-made and did strike earth the effects would be very local
    and limited.

    Some scientists have criticised the IAU and Nasa for releasing
    warnings about the asteroid only for them to be rescinded less than
    a day later.

    Benny Peiser of Liverpool John Moores University said it was
    "extremely unwise" of them and the warning was premature and
    alarmist.

  • I expect it from the local newspaper and tabloids who have nothing better to write about. But I don't want to have "THEE WORLDE WILL ENDE!" thrust into my face on /. of all places.

    We're all sensible enough to realise that if there were the remotest chance of it happening, the world would club together and nuke/laser/persuade it off course as necessary. And anyway, I'd put the likelihood of the world being ripped apart in a Nuclear war before 2030 at more than 500/1 anyway.

    We're more than sensible enough to know when the media is just spinning to fill column inches. There's enough to talk about without this.

    Fross
  • Only 1-3 Megatons? I fart bigger that that! =)
  • What if the technique misfires, and brings the asteroid on a much more disastrous course than it is now? Like, a 30% chance of a collision in 2010 ?

  • so does this mean that we have to
    send a team of redneck oil drillers
    up into space, and nuke the object
    from the inside?

    as long as we get to leave Bruce
    Willis up there to die, i'm all for
    it.

  • by Mr Z ( 6791 ) on Saturday November 04, 2000 @01:29PM (#648994) Homepage Journal

    Actually, I think they're slightly different. An "N in M" probibility means that the probability p of that event occurring is given by p = N/M . Here, N specifies the relative number of outcomes that represent the event under consideration, and M represents the relative number of total number of possible outcomes.

    In contrast, "M to N" means that if you performed M + N trials, one event would occur M times and the other would occur N times. Here, M and N represent the relative number of outcomes of two distinct events, with no statement made about the total number of possible outcomes. Often, the number associated with N is the event in question, and the "other event" is merely "the event associated with N didn't occur." In that case, the probability p that the event associated with N occurs is given by p = N / (N + M) .

    So, by this argument, 1-in-2 odds is equivalent to 1-to-1 odds. The idea is that the first nomenclature specifies the likelihood of a single event compared to the total of all events, and the second nomenclature specifies the likelihood of one event relative to another event. Got that?

    At any rate, with a 1-in-500 chance, the difference between 1-in-500 and 500-to-1 is negligible.

    --Joe
    --
    Program Intellivision! [schells.com]
  • I'll just make sure to be on the other side of the earth with a tv
  • Unless it's a Apollo rocket, in which case world governments probably won't be too happy with the States. ;)
  • Not when there is a atmosphere to get through speed is only has a small effect if the acutal thingie that is trying to enter the atmosphere is of a small mass then it will take a shorter time to burn up than something that is dense....But the biggest factor is the material that it is made of e.g if its a big block of Granate it wont burn up but if it is a booster that is made of metals that are designed to burn up we dont have any problems either way we will find out in 50-1,000 years.
  • Shoot again, of course.
  • I'm no expert, but as I understand it the recent Pakistani and Indian nuclear tests were picked up on seismographs thousands of kilometres away. If that is the case, a megaton impact would be picked up by seismographs, and the media would *certainly* be interested. Heck, the asteroid scares that have been publicised attract plenty of media attention, why wouldn't a real collision?
  • Oh man! Thanks for making my day! My dad bought that *exact* car (color and all) when we were kids and used it to tow us and a camper all around the 5 great lakes on a 3-month oddessy of camping, poison ivy and broken bones (brother fell at Warren Dunes in Michigan and broke his collar bone).

    Geez, never thought I'd see one again. That POS promptly turned into a scabbed, scaly pile of rusing sheet metal and groaning iron about 2 &1/2 years after it was purchased. I've never seen any model of car go to rust as quickly as a 70's Ford Torino.

    Thanks for the flashback.
  • We can order a bunch of pillows off ht internet

  • ...because if George W. gets elected, he's big oil, and we can have him send Bruce Willis and his leatherneck oil riggers up there to drop a nuke in it and kick its ass. Failing that, we'll find a bunch of old geezers who know how to take apart that there Apollo booster. Mebbe we can get John Glenn up there--he's old enough to remember how all this crap works.

    Failing all that, though, "Surf's up, dude!"

    TOTKChief, who can't view Armageddon without screaming, "You bloody fscking idiots, you can't throttle a solid rocket like that, and you damn sure can't re-light the bastard!"


    --
  • by nuintari ( 47926 ) on Saturday November 04, 2000 @01:50PM (#649003) Homepage
    If you get your hands on released US Nilitary documents from years past, they track, and document 3 - 5 major collisions every decade! Major, megaton impacts aren't a once every few thousand years issue, they happen about every 3 - 4 years. Just bear in mind they are most likely to impact near polar regions, and there is a SHITLOAD of empty space on this planet, so no one ever seems to notice.

    hell, events such as the Tunguska blast are predicted to happen every 200 years or so.... some people just need to stop watching those disaster movies. Should I mention that New York City sits on a pressure slip quake fault that triggers every 250 years or so..... and the last recorded quake in NYC was about 245 years ago, and the experts say it was like a 9.3 on the richtor scale..... Or would that cause a massive media hype as well......
  • If this actually happens, we won't have to worry about the 32 bit/UNIX time
    bug problem in ~2036!

  • Hey, just a few questions for those who might be experienced in this field.

    If they found out that something like this were going to hit the Earth for sure, how well could they predict where it would come down?

    My second question is, would this object do a lot more damage if it landed smack in the middle of the ocean?

    Thanks.
  • The Torino Scale [nasa.gov], as presented in the link provided in the story, is useless. It tries to rank objects on a scale of 0 to 10 based on the damage they would inflict if an impact did occur, yet it simultaneously tries to rank based on the likelihood of collision, though these factors aren't necessarily correlated at all.

    Basically, an object gets a 0 if it is extremely unlikely to hit the Earth and|or wouldn't inflict any damage if it did. An object gets an 8, 9, or 10 if it's certain to hit the Earth, and|or would inflict continental or global devistation.

    The Torino scale doesn't give a way to categorize objects which are certain to strike the Earth but pose no danger, nor does it facilitate ranking objects that could prove catacalysmic, but have only a marginal likelyhood of impact.

    Looks like something more suited to a bad asteriod movie than a NASA research site.

    Kevin Fox
  • The early data doesn't match old orbits [harvard.edu] of Saturn V third-stage (S-IVB, used in Earth orbit to accelerate to the Moon) data, although perhaps an orbit has altered over 30 years. After Apollo 12, that stage was aimed at the Moon [nasa.gov] for the benefit of seismic instruments. Or it might be from the USSR.

    You can see that none of the objects in the table has a period of 353 or 354 days. Perhaps an object with a longer period got slowed, or one with a shorter period got accelerated, by Earth-Moon approaches. Or Apollo 12's lost stage ended up here...

  • 500-to-1 odds sounds like extremely precise calculations..heh. Wonder if they are betting on it in vegas.
  • Maybe the steep steps as a result of using integers are a little misleading, but I think the main idea of this scale is informing the public with a single number between 0 and 10, to indicate severity of the impact.

    After all, a not-so-certain probability of a really really big rock is just as scaring/bad as a somewhat more certain impact of a small rock.
    The real engineers at NASA etc. wil surely use just both numbers (probability and energy) instead of that silly number.

  • > According to new calculations...the unidentified object ... will miss the Earth in September 2030 by at least 3 million miles.

    Then I suppose everything is A-OK. Unless it turns out to be a big horse shoe or hand grenade.
  • Man bites dog is news - dog bites man is not. Meteors strikes that are air bursts - which a megaton range strike probably is - and which don't kill anybody are probably never reported to the media by the seismologists. I am sure that they see the effects - but they don't report them - any more than they report normal seismic events about the same size that do no damage - and there are a lot of those. Only part of the power of an airburst goes into shaking the ground - so there is a good chance that the seismologists may not even recognize them for what they are.
  • Yup armageddon 2 starring Leslie Nelson and Ben Affleck. This time grandpa goes into space first to destroy that wacky asteroid .. but it turns out that the big rock is full of nubile girls!! and mayhem insues..... ughh I can see it now.. lets hope it hurries up and lands on me.
  • ...object 2000 SG344 has a 500-to-1 chance of hitting earth in the year 2030...

    I really hope you didn't really mean that, since that would mean that the probability of collision is ~99.8%!

    Presumably, what you meant is "500-to-1 chance against hitting earth". That's a little more sane -- whew! -- but still very slightly inaccurate. The original article stated that the object had a "1-in-500 chance" of collision, which is equivalent to a 499-to-1 (not 500-to-1) chance against.
    --

  • You bloody fscking idiots, you can't throttle a solid rocket like that, and you damn sure can't re-light the bastard!
    Yeah. At least Deep Impact used a different rocket technology to explain that little bit. :-)
  • Not really. The article is discussing the odds of an extraterrestrial object hitting the earth. Someone asked about the terminology being used to state the odds that that will happen. This post explains the terminology.

    --Joe
    --
    Program Intellivision! [schells.com]
  • Thanks! That gave me the solution I needed. The key: Append "&newguid=42" to the URL for the link, and the page loads since it thinks I've visited the msid.msn.com site and gotten a GUID from Microsoft. As long as I randomize that GUID with every visit, it's a meaningless number.

    Maybe I can hack together a simple server that I can redirect msid.msn.com to to generate pseudo-random GUIDs with automagically...

    --Joe
    --
    Program Intellivision! [schells.com]
  • hey now.... i kinda like the 37 mac SE/30's i got yesterday, and with the ammount of time i spent getting them all working, i don't really want them shot off into space quite yet ;)
  • Astronomers have confirmed that object 2000 SG344 has a 500-to-1 chance of hitting earth in the year 2030, a much higher probability of impact than any object before it.

    Higher that those that *did* hit earth?

  • Maybe we could ask the Martians for their space defense technology. They seem to be pretty good at shooting down all those NASA probles we sent them !
  • by Gefiltefish ( 125066 ) on Saturday November 04, 2000 @02:20PM (#649020)
    My fellow geeks:

    Now is the time to play the "Only if you were the last man on earth" card.

    Go for it!

    You might get lucky.
  • by Pope Slackman ( 13727 ) on Saturday November 04, 2000 @03:47PM (#649021) Homepage Journal
    It should be noted that the Torino scale is the probability of a 1970's Ford Gran Torino [stationwagon.com]
    station wagon being propelled into low Earth orbit, if the impact were to occur.

    --K
    Hey. It had to be said.
    ---
  • I read some of the postings on Usenet from NASA. They base the size calculation on how bright the object is. They basically have a model that says assuming the object's brightness is X then judging from the amount of light it's giving off it's corresponding size is Y. The range of sizes they give for it tops out at around 75 meters (210+ feet) assuming the same reflectivity that has been observed and confirmed on other objects.

    If it is manmade - a leftover Apollo/Saturn booster stage for example - then it's reflectivity is going to be MUCH higher than a rock. If you again correlate to how much light it's giving off, a smaller manmade object will give off more in a smaller size. In other words, if it is manmade then its size is considerably smaller.

    Several Saturn V third stage booster segments were sent into orbit around the sun between 1968 and 1971. I've seen reference to 5 in particular that this object might be. The third stage of the Saturn V is roughly cylindrical; 6.6 meters in diameter and 17.8 meters long. With absolutely no firsthand knowledge or proof, I'd bet that's what it is. Can't the HST get a picture of the thing?
  • Now THAT was funny!!!

    There's some good wit on /. today. I Am Pleased.
  • Yeah, that was supposed to be a "G" oops
  • Try this one:

    Object 1999 AN10 will slip by Earth on Aug. 7, 2027 at about 7 AM GMT at a distance of 0.002652 astronomical units - about 246 521 miles. Check it out for yourself at this page [harvard.edu].

    The Moon is about 246 000 miles away.

    In astronomical terms, that's a bullet passing five millimeters above your head.
    -------------
  • Predcition of where it would land depends on how accurately they know its orbit, obviously. There are two factors. First is the position factor: where exactly will the object be when it impacts? Second is the time factor. Since the earth turns, knowing the exact time of impact is necessary for knowing precisely where on the planet the impact will occur.

    As to what location would do the most damage, it depends on how big the object is. A small object (like this one) will obviously do the most damage if it hits a city. If it lands in the ocean, unless it's fairly close to a city, it won't be noticeable. However, a really large object is just the opposite. If it hits a city, it could wipe out everything within, I dunno, ten or a hundred miles. If it hits the ocean, the tidal wave could destroy everything on the coasts for thousands of miles.
  • And no V'ger jokes? WTF? This is /. isn't it?
  • I wonder what would happen to the earths atmosphere, oceans etc. if the object did hit the moon?
  • Isn't it read "1 in 500" rather than 500 to 1? I believe 500 to 1 means 5x 100% chance while they really mean "one chance in 500" the newspaper I get said it "1 in 500"
  • I heard a while back about an asteroid that would pass by very close earth around 2012 or so? Anyone have any info on this or related links?
  • by KFury ( 19522 ) on Saturday November 04, 2000 @04:22PM (#649031) Homepage
    Got it. But this is exactly the problem. If you actually want to use the number for any purpose more meaningful than striking panic, you need to have both numbers, and not one. Mapping two independent variables onto one dimension has big problems, as the linked chart [nasa.gov] shows.

    For example, an impact that would cause regional damage and has a 98% chance of striking is rated as a 3, while one with a 99% chance of striking is an 8.

    Another example: According to the chart, an impact with global consequences and a 1:1000 probability merits a 2 on the Torini scale, but if it has a 1:999 probability, it jumps to a 6 on the scale.

    Both of the above examples are where the spatial regions meet at a line. If you look at where they meet at a point, it's possible to nudge an impact between a ranking of 2 and 7 (KE: 10E5MT, P: 10E-2), or from a 3 to a 9 (KE:100MT, P: 0.99).

    This is arbitrary and, as mentioned before, useless for anything other than scaremongering and puff-pieces.

    Kevin Fox
  • by empesey ( 207806 ) on Sunday November 05, 2000 @07:02AM (#649033) Homepage
    From the article:

    But no-one knows exactly how many undiscovered asteroids are out there.

    Way to go Mr. Wizard.
  • And By friday precovery data showed that the object wasn't going to hit....

    Of course... because precovery data exists then it may be a sign that this isn't a man made object.
  • by swordgeek ( 112599 ) on Saturday November 04, 2000 @02:36PM (#649040) Journal
    Hmmm.

    500-1 odds that a 32 bit clock will be good enough. I'm comfortable enough with that to cut back the 64-bit conversion budget.

  • by big_groo ( 237634 ) <groovis.gmail@com> on Saturday November 04, 2000 @02:37PM (#649041) Homepage
    OK, Ok. I'll volunteer to go up in the space shuttle, drill a hole in this thing and blow it apart. There are, however, a couple of conditions:

    1. I want the new Athlon 5.5 GHz with 1.2M RAM
    2. I want the new 8 TB optical HD. (no Zoltrix)
    3. Someone has to pay my $2400/month Napster fee
    4. I don't want to pay anymore taxes.
    5. Hookers.
    6. Split up Microsoft.

    Deal?

    I AM groo
  • Hey, if nothing else, I'd give you a +1 just for spelling catacalysmic correctly.
  • LOL! Maybe I should have checked. Looked good to me though.
  • Heh. The irony is it turned out I got it wrong. It's cataclysmic [m-w.com]. After reading your post, I just had to make sure...

    Kevin Fox
  • by Anonymous Coward on Saturday November 04, 2000 @04:57PM (#649050)
    Since there was an 1-in-500 impact chance initially, we can deduce that the error bar for the position of the space object in 2030 was about 22 Earth radii. That's the radius of a disk whose area is about 500 times the area of a cross section of the Earth. So if we know that the asteroid will hit that disk somewhere at random, there will be a 1-in-500 impact chance with Earth.

    That said, you would expect the more precise analysis to be something like "miss by 15 earth radii" or "miss by 27 Earth radii". But no! The latest verdict is "miss by 11 lunar distances". This is a miss by 660 Earth radii. This is waaaaaay out of the initial error bars. The initial error bars were wrong.

    When the actual answer lies outside of your error bars you need to be shot. Especially when your analysis is to be published in 5 million newspapers. I don't want to hear about any other prediction from this guy again. </rant>

  • Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • How can an Apollo rocket booster cause the same
    damage as a multi-megaton explosion? Even Skylab didn't cause any damage when it fell.
  • Ok, so where do I sign up for the crack "Missile Defense" geek squad?
  • by javajawa ( 126489 ) on Saturday November 04, 2000 @12:29PM (#649058) Homepage
    We need to send an unprepared group of lunatics up there to destroy it :)

    give them a nuke, but no detonation counter...


    javajawa# sleep
  • Nobody answered about an asteroid collision. Now one seems to be coming, are they going to look stupid? Well, no. When was the last time a candidate thought more than 5 years ahead? We need a system where longer term planning becomes neccesary.
  • Wrong Wrong Wrong WRong!!!!

    you're assuming that the error in every direction is equal.

    typically with encounters some variables are more uncertain thatn others (usually the arrival time). So what happens it the error elipse is stretched out very long and thin. In the case of 1997xf11 the error ellipse was 1000 times long than it was wide.

  • by imac.usr ( 58845 ) on Saturday November 04, 2000 @12:32PM (#649063) Homepage
    Funny, when I was growing up, I was told the world would end at 6:28:15 AM on February 6, 2040....

    As I grew older, though, the powers that be extended the deadline to 29940, so we're OK.

    (Mac developers will understand.)


  • Of course I was a little bit sensationalist, how else would I get the article posted on slashdot. Also, when I submitted this article the chances were really quite high compared to anything that we've found floating out in space in the past.

    Asteroid/Comet impacts are not an if, but a when. It will happen someday. Maybe I was a bit enthusiastic...but still, you have to get the general public educated about it somehow.

    Of course nuclear war is a threat, but I see an impact as a far greater threat of totally wiping out all life on earth.

    Anyway, NASA changed their page only hours after I submitted the story, don't blame me or the editors for this "sensationalistic material". If you need someone to blame, why not NASA?

    -----------------------------

  • Okay, so this doesn't mean we forget about it. It means we have a 71 year warning that something is coming -- and a 30 year warning that we have a chance to get a close look at it. Or a 30 year warning of the closest approach if we have to put equipment on it to tinker with its orbit.
  • by Accipiter ( 8228 ) on Saturday November 04, 2000 @02:59PM (#649068)
    Oh Goody.

    Let's give Steve Jobs a reason to say that Apple has saved Mankind? Isn't his head big enough as it is?

    -- Give him Head? Be a Beacon?

  • Take a look at http://impact.arc.nasa.gov/torino/pr of. html [nasa.gov]. It shows a two dimensional chart with probability and likely damage.

    If it will hit, but cause no damage, it's a zero. If it will completely destroy the earth, with less than 10^-8 probability, it's also a zero. Goes to 1, then 2, then 6, 7, 10 with increasing probability.

    -KDP
  • by Anonymous Coward on Saturday November 04, 2000 @05:29PM (#649075)
    The latest verdict is "miss by 11 lunar distances". This is a miss by 660 Earth radii.

    What if the error was of the form of an error ellipse instead of an error circle around the Earth like you seem to assume? If the ellipse is so thin that it's almost a straight line, then it could explain why the odds were 1-to-500 and the miss distance ended up being 660 Earth radii. Unfortunately, they only publish watered down results, we don't know the shape of the error.

    That said, you are probably right. They were too confident in the precision of their initial data, and they were lucky to get the Earth in the bullseye of their flawed data. ;-)

  • That would probably mostly depend on how large the object is. At most, it would probably create a nice, new crater for us to look at, along with lots of dust to block the view of that nice, new crater. Even a 6-mile object only made a dent in this rock we live on; the Moon could probably take a 10-mile object and laugh it off.

    I would think we could get a nice shower of Moon rock blasted from the impact.

    You would probably need a 100-mile object before things get worrisome.

    Then again, I Am Not An Astronomer, But I Play One On Slashdot.
    -------------
  • by Veteran ( 203989 ) on Saturday November 04, 2000 @06:02PM (#649080)
    No one will notice megaton size impacts until the cosmic dice come up snake - eyes and we lose a city to one of them. Then everyone will start kicking and screaming and wondering why no one did anything about it before hand.

    One megaton is a horrendous explosion: the Atomic bomb which killed 60,000 people and incinerated Hiroshima was 1/50th of a megaton; approximately 20 kilotons. The Hiroshima bomb had a circle of total destruction of with a radius of about 1 mile: anything within a mile of ground zero was pretty much demolished. A megaton explosion would do similar damage for a radius of about 3.6 miles. A one megaton hit on a major city would kill about half a million people.

    There is some evidence that a Chinese city of about 10,000 was destroyed by a megaton range strike around AD 1490.

  • by passion ( 84900 ) on Saturday November 04, 2000 @12:32PM (#649082)

    This begs to bring up the topic once more of whether we should build an international space defense system. Of course, we should be able to pick things out 20-30 years beforehand, but still - what if we caught something less than a year beforehand?

    The initial piece in "Rendezvous with Rama" by Arthur C. Clarke posed this type of question, and he posed a rather interesting possible solution.

    Hopefully, we can prevent ourselves from going the way of the Dinosaurs - or those shitty movies that were made in the last few years.

  • Actually, the story said it might be an Apollo rocket booster that has been floating around for a while, and has colleced some debris. I suspect they are talking about dust, small meteroites, ice, etc. The story also explained that if it was in fact a rocket booster, it would not be a problem, and I'm assuming the reason for that is it's enormous size would be mostly comprised of loosly bonded matter, with low density. If it actually did turn out to be an asteroid, it's density and solidity would be of greater threat, as it would not vaporize upon re-entry.

  • I think the 1-3 megaton estimate is assuming an asteroid, but they aren't sure it isn't a rocket booster yet.

    Either way, it's only a level 1 Torino.

    I thought the Torino scale was supposed to keep media outlets from exaggerating. I guess it now gives them an excuse to run a story when something scores non-zero.
    -

  • by Anonymous Coward
    With all this talk about the possibility of Extinction Event Asteroids and stuff, why not take a poke at some of these smaller asteroids/debris to try out techniques that could spin-off into something that might actually work? Heck, I'd have more confidence in something that was actually proven to work than something that "might theorectically work but we won't know until we try it". I'm sure some of the nations who realize that the extinction of the human race might not be a Good Thing (tm) would be willing to pitch in the dough and recourses to work on the technology before we actually have to use it...

    Mike
  • by Anonymous Coward on Saturday November 04, 2000 @12:40PM (#649088)
    ...then we won't have to worry about fixing the unix date problem.
  • by patreides ( 210724 ) on Saturday November 04, 2000 @12:44PM (#649089)
    they don't even know how big it is! They can't predict the movement of an asteroid thrity years from now, including how it will interact with any as-of-yet undiscovered objects that may cross its path, like comets and the like.

    Next thing we hear is all the presidential candidates saying: "Look, we need to develop an asteroid defense system in forty years or we're toast! Vote for me!" (or are they already saying that?)
  • yeah, I really meant any big quake, where I live, middle of Ohio, we get nothing, little tremors, but we do sit on a very slow fault that can cause tremendous quakes once in a great while, new york gets them as well, not very often, but when it happens, buildings will fall, no such thing as quake proofing in nyc.
  • well, asteroid scares only started getting big hype after that slew of awful awful movies about global horror came out. I don't think people cared before that, and these things are fairly spaced out, and when one does hit, we'll hear about it.

  • Hmmm, interesting. I read the "real" article as well, only a few hours earlier than you.
    When I read it it still stated there was a chance for impact in 2030. I noticed the page changed a few hours after I submitted the story. You can't really blame me for not being able to edit my story submission.

    But thanks for pointing out the update to everyone else.

    -----------------------------

  • by efuseekay ( 138418 ) on Saturday November 04, 2000 @12:53PM (#649101)

    Energy = 1/2 *m* v^2

    so it's the velocity, not the mass that does the damage. A small Ap11 booster at 50km/s would be a bout a nuke. Watch "Armageddon" for the effects of a nuke hitting a major city.

FORTRAN is not a flower but a weed -- it is hardy, occasionally blooms, and grows in every computer. -- A.J. Perlis

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