B612 Foundation and 2004 YD5 Asteroid Capture? 164
aisnota writes "The B612 Foundation hopes to alter the orbit of an asteroid in a controlled manner by 2015 and seems ready to do the obvious and capture 2004 YD5. Slice it up, put the pieces into aerobrake containers like a simplified version of the Mars landers. Then just sell the pieces on EBay to fund more ambitious projects."
Perhaps lobbying would be more effective (Score:5, Interesting)
Whether taking the matter into their own hands, privately funded B612 will have an uphill battle to begin the process with such limited funding. Perhaps they would be better suited as an international scientific lobby, making the case and such apologetics as to attract attention to the issue.
Also, in case you're wondering, B612 is the asteroid home of Antoine de Saint-Exupéry's protagonist in The Little Prince.
Re:Perhaps lobbying would be more effective (Score:1)
I only remember it as the gayest (in the literal sense) thing ever to air on the publicly funded TVO. I remember pulling my hair wondering "WHERES THE BEAR CALLED JEREMY WHO CAN DO MOST ANYTHING!?!"
Ah the joys of growing up in rural Ontario, with only CBC, TVO and Global (on a really clear day) to watch.
Re:Perhaps lobbying would be more effective (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Perhaps lobbying would be more effective (Score:2)
So, like Private Industry sure is fighting the Iraqi War a lot better than the Government fought WWII. . .
Maybe (Score:3, Insightful)
Darwin Awards! (Score:2)
Extortion for fun or profit. (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Extortion for fun or profit. (Score:2)
Re:Extortion for fun or profit. (Score:2)
The Alan Parsons Project. (Score:2)
Re:Need to remind these guys about the mars orbite (Score:2)
Re:Need to remind these guys about the mars orbite (Score:2)
If they're using the method I saw on a documentary about this group, it's mounting a low thrust rocket (ion jet I think) on the asteroid and slowly deflecting the orbit. So continuous tracking and plenty of time (years) to change course, unlike the Hollywood option of planting nukes in boreholes and detonating them with 2 seconds to spare.
MORE ambitious projects? (Score:2)
Re:MORE ambitious projects? (Score:5, Interesting)
On the other hand, after gracefully flying this big space rock into Earth orbit, then intend to, what, cut on it with high-powered lasers? Try getting any government to allow civilians control of a high-powered laser, meant for cutting through whatever you point it at, to be orbiting the Earth. And, even if they cleared that hurdle, what keeps them from accidentally shooting down some randomly passing communications satellite while they're cutting through an arbitrarily-sized rock?
I laud these people's desire to actually go do something like this, and I'd love to work on a project like this. But the idea of slicing it up and dumping it dirtside seems to be a little bold based on things we know now. How about bagging it, grinding it up, and processing the ore for resources (iron, nickel, oxygen, water, etc.) that can be used in space. Heck, it would be way more amazing to put a package of ground-up asteroid in a tug and deliver it to the space station for examination than it would to wrap it in airbags and deliver it to a bunch of glam junkies down here. And scientists would probably pay more per kilo of ore than consumers would, particularly if it had never come in contact with our atmosphere.
Re:MORE ambitious projects? (Score:2)
> communications satellite while they're cutting through an arbitrarily-sized
> rock?
A modicum of planning, coupled with an extremeley low probability of disturbing anything other than what's being aimed at.
Slicing the rocks (Score:2)
People have known how to slice up rocks for millenia. Egyptian pyramides are build from sliced up rocks, pre-Columb Peruvian cities build from sliced up rocks, and even Great Chinese wall is build from sliced up rocks.
And in XIX century one guy have invented much better tool to slice up rocks. He got so rich that he have established an annual prize for advance in science. His name was Alfred Nobel.
This was long before first laser was even thought of.
Re:Slicing the rocks (Score:2)
A better way would be to get some of those green "weapon grade" lasers [nyud.net]
Re:MORE ambitious projects? (Score:3, Interesting)
I'm curious as to why this bullshit was posted, since NOWHERE ON THEIR SITE does the foundation mention this. I think the submitter just made it up to get a catchy tag line.
Re:MORE ambitious projects? (Score:2)
Yes, there are quite a few people who understand gravity. You're apparently not one of them...
There is no way that you could hope to fly an object as massive as an asteroid into earth orbit without severe environmental impact.
Either that, or you don't have any comprehension how massive "as massive as an asteroid" really is.
Most likely both. All the asteroids in solar system combined weight less than Moon! If someone would drag Ceres (largest asteroid, about 3% moon mass) to orbit, it m
Re:MORE ambitious projects? (Score:2)
The scary part is that it would double as a "clean" weapon of mass destruction. Just drop it on an annoying enemy and make a big crater.
Re:MORE ambitious projects? (Score:2)
Not if you let it hit the atmosphere at various angles at interplanetary velocities. Then it probably will be incinerated or explode due to the heating.
If it's solid iron or slightly denser, it's in the range of the Sikhote-Alin 1947 meteorite. That one exploded and left multiple craters.
If you push it in at 20 km/sec and perhaps 60 degrees, then you could be talking about the 1-5 kiloton range. Most of the force would be at the point of impact,
You can do it EEEeeebay (Score:4, Funny)
When the buyer found out that it was just rocks from my back yard, he was pretty heated! Damn you B612 for stealing
Re:You can do it EEEeeebay (Score:2)
That rock is just an "aged meteor".
Can't sell atoms on eBay (Score:2)
Tsk tsk. I think somewhere in eBay's prohibited items list, there is a rule against selling anything that contains or ever consisted of atoms.
""See? He's got atoms in his pockets! Call the local constabulary, Smithers!". "
Re:Can't sell atoms on eBay (Score:2)
Good to know... (Score:3, Informative)
why though (Score:2)
Why would this be a non-profit company? This seems like it would be the first instance of asteroid mining. Wouldn't they want to profit from the chunks they get? I mean, it's mining. When has that ever been done for anything but earning money off the stuff being mined?
Perhaps they plan on giving all the money to some charity but I don't think regular companies are restricted from spending profit whoever they want.
Getting tax breaks is the only thing I can think of. I hope some
Re:why though (Score:2)
Because the whole "slice it up and send it back to earth" is something the submitter made up. There's nothing about that on the foundations's site. Their aim is to so "significantly alter the orbit of an asteroid in a controlled manner by 2015" as a proof of concept for defence against colliding asteroids. That's all. No doubt they've thought about minig, but it makes sense in early stages (decades pr
Re:Good to know... (Score:2)
For all you non corporation lawyers out there (Score:2)
feeling of dread (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:feeling of dread (Score:1)
Re:feeling of dread (Score:2)
Feeling of Uninformed-ness (Score:3, Informative)
Virg
Re:Feeling of Uninformed-ness (Score:2)
Re:Feeling of Uninformed-ness (Score:5, Funny)
Have they ruled out using witchcraft as well?
Re:feeling of dread (Score:5, Informative)
A five meter asteroid, should it impact the Earth, would do little damage. Yeah, if it hit someone, that would suck, but the odds of that are small. This is the perfect size to practice on - especially if you're carving it up into parts for recovery.
We need the practice in case we have to do it on a much larger asteroid to prevent it striking the Earth.
The scientific benefit from the pieces of the asteroid would be immense. As a meteorite collector, I know I'd be bidding on chunks of it on eBay just to add to my collection.
The piece of a Mars rock I've got is pathetically small. Having a 10kg rock in the collection would be fun.
Re:feeling of dread (Score:3, Informative)
We have a hard time hitting Mars with a rocket whose every vector change we control when we're trying. Not to mention that, if they did somehow put it in an orbit that would strike Earth, they also of necessity have the ability to alter its orbit again so it wouldn't.
As far as blowing up t
Re:feeling of dread (Score:2)
A question about the scattershot effect - a 5 meter asteroid - something we could easily obliterate - you don't think that would scatter?
Do they calculate the return trajectory of any asteroid they hit but doesn't
Re:feeling of dread (Score:2)
Re:feeling of dread (Score:3, Informative)
May be because you are stupid? You comment about diverting Earth instead of divering an asteroid certainly suggests that...
Re:feeling of dread (Score:2)
Re:feeling of dread (Score:2)
And I noticed that your formatting is poor, but why don't you "check, double check, triple check, and god dammit check it again" if you know it's so? Are you above the rules?
Anyway, I insulted you not because your post was poorly written, but because it was stupid. Not doing something is not avoiding the risks, it's just ta
Re:feeling of dread (Score:2)
And i never said not to do anything
Re:feeling of dread (Score:2)
No one is planning on blowing up the asteroid. RTFA. Pushing it gently is the idea.
(How the fuck did this get modded "insightful"?)
Re:feeling of dread (Score:2)
Re:feeling of dread (Score:2)
No. You've posted a dozen comments but never bothered to read the fucking article.
Re:feeling of dread (Score:2)
Re:feeling of dread (Score:2)
So where does it say they're going to use bombs? I think you're confused "the article" with "the Bruce Willis movie". - and i also stated i was doing something else at the same time . stop assuming
I'll assume you're a troll as well as an idiot.
Bye.
Re:feeling of dread (Score:2)
RTFA! (Score:2)
Why do I have this ominous feeling of dread when I think of some overzealous people trying to prove they can do something as destructive as messing with an asteroid.
Partly because you're being stupid in this matter, partly because you didn't read the articles, and partly because the submitter made this stuff up.
It's also very small, and would burn u
Non-effective name (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Non-effective name (Score:2)
Re:Non-effective name (Score:2)
dropping the parts onto Earth doesn't work (Score:5, Interesting)
This is hardly going to work. They put the pieces into (expensive, once you make enough and thet them up there) containers, then drop them to Earth. How the heck do they expect to get them back? A container like this is not a very controlled re-entry device. Do they just expect anyone who comes across one, or anyone who's property it lands on to return it to them? What of the liability of hurling this at someone's property or home or body? It's not a problem on Mars, since Mars is free of pesky lawyers so far, but on Earth - big problem due to the lawyer infestation.
Re:dropping the parts onto Earth doesn't work (Score:2, Funny)
Re:dropping the parts onto Earth doesn't work (Score:3, Funny)
Each container has etched into its side:
Please return to:
B612 Foundation
125 Red Hill Circle
Tiburon, CA 94920
Postage guaranteed.
Re:dropping the parts onto Earth doesn't work (Score:2)
of course aiming for lawyers could be a video game.
Think of the tickets you could sell for such a game. Think of the throngs of lawyers standing outside waiting for you to target them for a lawsuit. Don't forget to smile.
Re:dropping the parts onto Earth doesn't work (Score:2)
The Soyoz is a lot more complex than aerobrake containers like a simplified version of the Mars landers. Heck, it's a lot more complex than the recent Mars Landers, let alone simplified versions of them. You want to build an entire Soyuz type craft, guidance and rockets and all, to get a rock back from space? And do this over and over again, to try to sell the rocks on E-bay? I sincerely hope that the extent of your exposure to business finance is
Re:dropping the parts onto Earth doesn't work (Score:2)
Also note if somebody is building hundreds of space craft guidance computers, the price will begin to fall. it might be expensive today, but it will lower the costs, not only for the rocks, but for commercial space flights.
You are thinking of technology in today's pricing terms, not tomorrow's. Easy reference compare the orginial guidance co
Who owns it if it lands in my backyard? (Score:2, Funny)
Use retired space shuttles for a kinetic collision (Score:1)
low earth orbit (Score:2)
Re:Use retired space shuttles for a kinetic collis (Score:2)
Re:Use retired space shuttles for a kinetic collis (Score:3, Informative)
So, basically... (Score:1)
WAAAAAIIIIIT a second here... (Score:1, Funny)
Argh! Spidey sense tingling! Sense danger somewhere...
Re:WAAAAAIIIIIT a second here... (Score:2)
No, the submitter made all that up. Read the website, they want to nudge a small asteroid, one that's already safe, to test the technology. Nothing is comeing close to Earth. Nothng is being cut up and sold on eBay.
Too bad the "editors" don't RTFAs before posting troll articles like this.
Great Idea! (Score:2)
Sort of a DIRECT commercialization of space! LOL
And this guy thought mining data from asteroids... (Score:2)
http://science.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=133
Why return it to earth? (Score:5, Interesting)
It seems that if they can capture it into earth orbit, it would be more valuable where it is. It costs a lot of money to launch heavy things into space, it may be more valuable as a source of raw materials already in orbit.
It might eventually even be useful as a counterweight for a space elevator.
-jim
Re:Why return it to earth? (Score:3, Interesting)
Why eBay? (Score:4, Interesting)
Obviously this would generate massive publicity, and anyone wanting to buy a piece of this asteroid would go to the project website first. In other words, the people buying these chunks would not be people randomly browsing eBay and looking for something to burn money on. In fact I bet most of them would have to sign up to eBay just to bid on these pieces.
IMO, eBay is simply comprised of an infrastructure to handle auctions (which implementation-wise isn't that much of a task), and a pool of sellers and buyers. The latter is where eBay dominates and is the sole reason they are successful. However when it comes to something like selling these asteroid pieces, having a large seller / bidder user base is a moot point. In fact it is a detriment because it hurts the signal to noise ratio of legitimate bidders.
Dan East
Sounds like a great James Bond Plot (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Sounds like a great James Bond Plot (Score:2)
ahh tell him go ahead, I'm not there...
Jesus, eBay? Have you no ambition? (Score:2, Redundant)
A well punded project (Score:2, Funny)
After all, it's an ass-steroid, right?
Skip this. If you want a project, think big... (Score:2)
Okay, there is a little slippage technology-wise, but at least it gives us something to do with all those fissionables we have laying around. It might even be possible to but a spin on the critter and get the heavier elements into o
Re:Skip this. If you want a project, think big... (Score:2)
Then you might try zone refining by sweeping the beam of concentrated sunlight down the length of the molten or near-molten asteroid. This should allow the nickel and iron to at least separate.
There are a great many engineering deta
Why was this even accepted? (Score:4, Informative)
The only accurate part of the submission is "The B612 Foundation hopes to alter the orbit of an asteroid in a controlled manner by 2015".
Reading the B612 site reveals that everything else was made up by the submittor. The B12 foundation has not picked the specific asteroid, and they have no intention to either "slice it up" nor return any of it to earth.
If only I'd known!! (Score:2)
2. Cut product up into pieces and sell on ebay.
Now it all makes sense.
Earthshield (Score:2)
Unintended Consequences (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Unintended Consequences (Score:2)
Alzheimers. Not a good sign. (Score:2)
Astronauts make good sources for space-related links!
Rusty Schweickart is the only independent involved in the venture. A quick google query brought me to his homepage [well.com], where there are some very nifty links [well.com] to space stuff.
Astronauts make good sources for space-related links!
Rusty Schweickart is the only independent involved in the ventur
Author didn't RTFA (Score:2)
To quote from their site:
"Given the implicit structural weakness of as
Re:Author didn't RTFA (Score:2)
Don't be silly (Score:3, Funny)
Oh wait, now its 1/45.
Hang on, odds have changed again 1/56000....
Hey mods, about the fact checking of submissions ? (Score:2)
Re:Hey mods, about the fact checking of submission (Score:2)
No, just looks like a complete nutcase, according to [the archive of]his website [archive.org]
PS -- the quoted text ("The NEA that we will choose..."); what's the URL? I can't find that on the site.
Re:Bring it back to earth? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Bring it back to earth? (Score:2)
Re:Bring it back to earth? (Score:4, Insightful)
Too many B movies.
You realize this stuff drops to Earth all the time, don't you? It doesn't get thoroughly sterilized by the heat. If you find a significant-sized meteorite immediately after it hits the Earth, it's cold! The exterior of the metorite ablates, producing a fusion crust on the outside. The inside stays cold. The light you see from meteors as they go across the sky is compressed air that can't get out of the way in time. It's not the meteor burning up or melting.
That's one of the most fascinating things about finding lunar or Martian rocks that have come to Earth as meteorites. If there were anything living on either of those bodies, they probably would have spread to the Earth. For that matter, given a couple whacks the Earth has received, there may be Earth meteorites on the Moon and Mars, and they may have carried Earth life to both places.
There are microscopic forms of life on Earth that would have survived the hundreds of thousands of years in space, along with the vacuum, the freezing cold, and the radiation - especially if they were encapsulated in the rock in question.
We may find life on Mars when we look. It may look exactly like Earth life. Did life start on Mars and get knocked to Earth? Did life start on Earth and get knocked to Mars? Did it start someplace else and wind up on both planets? Or did one of those nice probes the USA and the Soviets sent to Mars wind up infecting Mars with Earthlife?
I keep hoping for strange DNA-analogs and weird biochemistry when we get to Mars, but life there might be a big disappointment. Well, at least as disappointing as life on Mars would be.
Re:Bring it back to earth? (Score:2)
Earth's gravity well is much deeper than either of Moon or Mars, so there's less stuff originating from us floating around, and in addition any "whack" or vulcanic eruption big enough to boost rocks to escape velocity from here would've probably killed any possible hitchhikers as well.
Re:Bring it back to earth? (Score:2)
Re:Bring it back to earth? (Score:2)
Re:Size??? (Score:3, Interesting)
Sure, if you're expecting a Hollywood nuke-the-rock scenario, it's not nearly as grand. But it has novelty that can be appreciated in terms of engineering/mission objectives.
Re:Size??? (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Chaos theoreticians having a field day? (Score:3, Interesting)
Suppose that tomorrow I oversleep by 15 minutes. As I bike to work, 15 minutes later than I normally would, I run into a bank robber attempting to make his getaway. The robber's partner gets spooked, and fires his weapon at me, but misses and ends up killing an innocent bystander.
Is the death of the bystander my fault because I slept in? If I had only woken up at the normal time, I wouldn't have been i
Re:Chaos theoreticians having a field day? (Score:2)
You can't remove objects from cosmos. Just because the rock is in form of sand or small boulders scattered around Earth doesn't mean it doesn't exist, it's just in different place and different form.
I know this one is small, but what is it possible that there is some sort of junction of asteroids/comets/etc., and they all exert some sort of gravitation pull that keeps them on their current courses? How do we know that just