Astronomers Catch Asteroid In Near-Miss Video 120
ananyo writes in with a story about an asteroid near miss and a neat video taken by researchers. "It may look like a blurry blob, but researchers using the InfraRed Telescope Facility (IRTF) in Hawaii have posted a video of 2012 KT42 — a small asteroid that zipped past Earth at a distance of just three Earth radii on 29 May — the sixth closest encounter of any known asteroid. The bright asteroid appears fixed, while background stars zip past but in fact the asteroid is zipping along at 17 kilometres per second. 'You get the view of riding along with it,' says planetary scientist Richard Binzel of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in Cambridge, who led the observations. At its closest, the asteroid was at a distance between the orbit of the space station (about 1 Earth radii) and geosynchronous satellites (about 6 Earth radii)."
Space station altitude.... (Score:5, Informative)
Space station altitude is no where near 1 earth radius!!
Re:Space station altitude.... (Score:5, Informative)
Ahem... if you're at ground level, your own altitude is 1 earth radius.
Re:Space station altitude.... (Score:4, Informative)
No, then my altitude is zero as is my distance to the earth.
Do not confuse altitude with the distance to the center of the earth.
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At ground level your altitude is zero. (Score:5, Informative)
And the space station is some *20 times* closer to Earth than an earth radius. I must say I stopped reading here too.
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360km pretty much is when compared to 36,000km.
360km (actually more like 400) is pretty little compared with earth's radius of over 6'000 kilometres
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Space station altitude is no where near 1 earth radius!!
But the semi-major axis is almost exactly an Earth radius (just over, if it matters ;D)
You said altitude, they used the nebulous "distance", which could mean distance from Earth's center just as well as altitude.
It's ambiguous, not wrong.
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I think I had you as a professor in a math class.
23 feet, kinda small asteroid (Score:4, Interesting)
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1 Earth radii (Score:5, Informative)
1 kilometer, 1 liter, 1 metric fuckton. Or as people use across the pond, 1 miles, 1 gallon, 1 imperial fuckton.
You don't say 1 kilometers, 1 liters and you don't say 1 radii either.
Hence, it's 1 radius.
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Re:1 Earth radii (Score:5, Funny)
s/miles/mile
s/miles/:)
(looks cute)
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No it is not. (Score:5, Funny)
As the Latin tag says, "Quem deus vult perdere, dementat prius" (those whom the Gods wish to destroy, they send mad thinking about the plural of Prius".
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In Latin "Prius" is not a noun, and so radius/radii does not apply. Normal rules of English mean the plural of Prius the vehicle is Priuses. (And the plural of octopus is similarly octopuses; it is not a Latin word but the Greek "oktopous", and its Greek plural is oktopodes.)
Octopodes is acceptable in English too, but I think most people would go "huh?"
Virus is another example - it's a collective noun like money or crockery, and the normal plural form is "virus" and not "viruses", unless you intend to count the groups, like in "moneys" and "crockeries".
I'm more concerned with the "near-miss", which is a verbose way of saying hit.
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Umm, no. English only imports plural forms from the source language when the singular form retains the singular markings from the source language (e.g., "alumni" because the singular form "alumnus" has that very recognizable Latin -us singular ending). The plural would only be "octopodes" if the singular were "octopous" (which would rhyme with "papoose"). The root may come from Greek, but the inflectional ending does not.
Near miss (Score:2)
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A near miss is just that; a miss that was close to the target. Example: "The shell was a near miss but the helmsman on the bridge was killed by a splinter".
Yes, that is a near miss, pronounced as two separate words. Which isn't what we're talking about here. That hyphen is important, as it changes the meaning quite a bit.
A near-hit = anear-hit = nearly a hit
A near hit = a hit that was near (they bombed the ammo depot next to you)
A near-miss = anear-miss = nearly a miss
A near miss = a miss that was near (they bombed the hospital next to you)
near-hit by the near hit (Score:2)
So then a far-miss is a hit too?
From my understanding:
near-hit: = anear hit = nearly hit, i.e. missed
near hit = a hit that was close
near-miss = anear miss = nearly missed, i.e. hit
near miss = a miss that was close
By applying the same rules:
far-miss = afar missed
This doesn't make sense to me. If you mean far miss, you can say so without the hyphen.
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+1 metric fuckton
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How do they measure the distance of something like this?
Units and news (Score:5, Insightful)
the asteroid was at a distance between the orbit of the space station (about 1 Earth radii) and geosynchronous satellites (about 6 Earth radii)."
How dumb do you have to imagine your audience to create non-standard units on every piece of news?
Also, with give such an imprecise distance as "between 6353km and 38118km"?
At least speed came in km/s instead of Sheppeis per Tatum grid.
Re:Units and news (Score:5, Informative)
Speaking of which, how much would 17km/s be in Sheppeis per Tatum grid? Good old "units" doesn't know either of those units.
Sheppey: A measure of distance equal to about 78 of a mile (1.4 km), defined as the closest distance at which sheep remain picturesque.
Tatum Grid [mit.edu]: the lowest regular pulse train that a listener intuitively infers from the timing of perceived musical events.
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Speaking of which, how much would 17km/s be in Sheppeis per Tatum grid? Good old "units" doesn't know either of those units.
Sheppey: A measure of distance equal to about 78 of a mile (1.4 km), defined as the closest distance at which sheep remain picturesque.
Tatum Grid [mit.edu]: the lowest regular pulse train that a listener intuitively infers from the timing of perceived musical events.
Oh, God. What happened with the good old FFF [wikipedia.org]?
Re:Units and news (Score:5, Funny)
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Man your longboats we're going to war?
Re:Units and news (Score:4, Informative)
They use "non-standard units" to give the reader a mental picture of the near miss. It has nothing to do with perceived stupidity.
Re:Units and news (Score:4, Interesting)
They use "non-standard units" to give the reader a mental picture of the near miss. It has nothing to do with perceived stupidity.
Ok. I used "stupidity" for "the inability of forming a mental picture for 10000 km".
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It is possible to be highly intelligent, yet not have the ability to make a good mental picture for 10000 km, especially if you don't know the size of the earth or the distance of various satellites orbiting it.
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It is possible to be highly intelligent, yet not have the ability to make a good mental picture for 10000 km, especially if you don't know the size of the earth or the distance of various satellites orbiting it.
I don't wish to go into definitions of "intelligence" but you don't really need to know the size of the earth (although it's quite sad) to know what ten thousand kms are.
Unless you don't know the size of your own country, or region. You would also have to not know the length of the equator, how far you can travel by car in a day, etc.
We're not talking parsecs here; it's ten fricking thousand kilometers. I think it's a knowledge that can be assumed taking into account the nature of the news.
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Sure, 10000 km is 10000 km, everybody knows that. But to make a mental image, you need to put that in scale with the earth, moon and satellites. Knowing these sizes is just memorization of a bunch of trivia, often a sign of intelligence, but not always. I know a 6 year old kid who scored 135 on his IQ test, but failed the question about which day comes after Thursday.
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Let's see which day comes after Thursday ... All of them?
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It depends on whether you order them chronologically or alphabetically.
Re:Units and news (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Units and news (Score:4, Insightful)
So do I get to choose a topic that is outside of your domain of knowledge, declare that any reasonable person should know it, then state that anyone who doesn't know it is stupid. Because that is pretty much what you're saying.
Believe it or not, stuff like the radius of the earth, the length of the equator, or even the size of your own country is called trivia. Most people don't know them because they don't have an immediate bearing on their life. That doesn't make them stupid.
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Believe it or not, stuff like the radius of the earth, the length of the equator, or even the size of your own country is called trivia. Most people don't know them because they don't have an immediate bearing on their life. That doesn't make them stupid.
I disagree. Not knowing the radius of the earth to the point of not being able to visualize 10000km, which would essentially mean not knowing whether it's closer to 1000 or to 100000km (as with any better precision than that you already surpass the articles') isn't trivia for me.
You scare me, btw. I now wonder what other things you consider to be trivial knowledge. The motion of the planets? What are those bright spots on the night sky? How does an engine work? How does a lightbulb work?
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I consider that a man's brain originally is like a little empty attic, and you have to stock it with such furniture as you choose. A fool takes in all the lumber of every sort that he comes across, so that the knowledge which might be useful to him gets crowded out, or at best is jumbled up with a lot of other things, so that he has a difficulty in laying his hands upon it.
A man should keep his little brain attic stocked with all the furniture that he is likely to use, and the rest he can put away in the lu
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I disagree. Not knowing the radius of the earth to the point of not being able to visualize 10000km, which would essentially mean not knowing whether it's closer to 1000 or to 100000km (as with any better precision than that you already surpass the articles') isn't trivia for me.
trivia plural of trivia
Noun:
Details, considerations, or pieces of information of little importance or value.
I'll bite. What practical/important use do you have for that piece of information?
'cause I don't have any, and I never have. Though, as it turns out, I used to work (in a data/IT support role) on a spacecraft. I guess you could say that I used to work indirectly for NASA.
So I think you're right - most folks would probably guess that the earth is between 1000-100000km in radius.
But I still don't kno
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I disagree. Not knowing the radius of the earth to the point of not being able to visualize 10000km, which would essentially mean not knowing whether it's closer to 1000 or to 100000km (as with any better precision than that you already surpass the articles') isn't trivia for me.
To summarize: You've watched a lot of scifi, so you can paint a picture in your head you think is right and you call that 'intelligence'.
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Oh, come on. If the radius of the earth in flipping kilometers isn't trivial, I'm sure I have no idea what would be. I suppose you also think everyone should memorize fifty digits of e (I only know thirteen digits), what month the Battle of Carchemish took place (I only know the year), the complete list of sound changes from Proto-Indo-European to Proto-Germanic (I only know about a third of them), which of the thr
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Then one can read: 73% of university students dont know what is celebrated on Easter! Or: 81% of senior high-school students have no idea when the Battle of Waterloo was fought. Thing is, just as you say, that it is trivial for most people (including students).
The moment that Theology students dont know what Easter is / history students dont know when the Battle of Waterloo was fought / The r
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Everybody is a genius. But if you judge a fish by its ability to climb a tree, it will live its whole life believing that it is stupid.
--Albert Einstein
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Not buying it? Ok...
You are familiar with a wooden popsicle stick aren't you? You have held one and you would be able to tell someone if one was longer or shorter then normal right?
Without measuring, using a calculator or calculating on a piece of paper... Tell me roughly how many popsicle sticks there are to a kilometer?
Just because someone is intima
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Just because someone is intimately familiar with the size of something in no way makes it easy or intuitive to convert that to something that is on a massively different scale.
"the asteroid was at a distance between the orbit of the space station (about 1 Earth radii) and geosynchronous satellites (about 6 Earth radii)."
1 to 6.
That's like not knowing how many times your height is a bus stop.
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I just imagine your mom.
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Ok. I used "stupidity" for "the inability of forming a mental picture for 10000 km".
That isn't a measure of stupidity, it's a measure of anyone who's seen yo mama!
Re:Units and news (Score:4, Insightful)
On the contrary, Earth radii is a useful unit when explaining how close something came to the earth. It helps to form a mental picture.
For example, if you state that the moon is 384,400km from the earth, that doesn't really mean much - even if you know the diameter of the earth it's not as easy to form a mental picture as it is if you say that it is 62 Earth radii.
Personally though I would have thought diameters would be better than radii? I.e. the moon is 31 Earth diameters (or simply 31 'Earths') away. (As a side note I think that is much further than most people would guess it is).
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Actually, when I first saw a scale drawing of the Earth-Moon system, I was shocked to see how close the Moon actually is.
A fun thing to do is ask people to stretch out their arm, and have them indicate how big the moon is between their thumb and index finger.
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I blame Hollywood. The moon is often shown in something more like a low earth orbit in sci-fi films (or at least the mass-market ones).
The famous 'earthrise' photo puts it in perspective.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Earthrise [wikipedia.org]
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Those in the know can easily convert it to real measurements in their favourite units but for the layman the relative distance is probably easier to grasp.
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How many parsecs did it take to zip by the Earth, and how does that compare to the less than 12 Parsecs it took the Millennium Falcon to do the Kessel Run?
Re:Units and news (Score:5, Informative)
Many sites [spaceweather.com] that report on PHAs (Potentially Hazardous Asteroids) use LD, meaning Lunar Distance. That's pretty descriptive to the general public - "Wow that thing flew right between Earth and the Moon!". According to their archive, KT42 missed Earth by 0.05 LD and was #6 on the all-time closest flyby list [blogspot.com].
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The fact his article leaked to
Don't get your hopes up... (Score:2)
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I say we should forget about the Moon or about Mars. It is time that Earth sets up a good detection system (maybe an orbital array of Hubble-like telescopes ?) and begins thinking about mitigation plans for the case where a dangerous asteroid is located.
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Historically speaking, the chance of being killed by an asteroid is low enough that I'm not going to worry about it.
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Actually, the dinosaurs were always worried about asteroid impacts. However, my own ancestors, who also lived during that time, never worried, and they survived.
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That is, several a year, and depending on the size, several a month.
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If its big enough to be a doomsday (impending-doom), its big enough to detect early enough.
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Near miss? Near hit, rather.... (Score:3, Informative)
Near miss? Near hit, rather....
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A near miss relates to situations where chance played a role averting a disaster. Since this asteroid has been traveling on it's well-defined path and wil lcontinues to do so, modified ofcource by bodys it passes, it has nothing to do with chance and no ammount of butteryflys flapping their wings could have made it hit earth.
It was rather:
- a near hit
- a narrow escape
- a close encounter
- a close call
Sinc
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Then there's the fact that it's called a new miss when a near miss would be a glancing hit semantically speaking.
Re:Near miss? Near hit, rather.... (Score:5, Insightful)
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This just in: Phrases mean different things in different contexts. Learn more in our in-depth report, "Natural languages sure are confusing, aren't they?"
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You can whine about anything you want no matter how invalid the complaint is, and have demonstrably done so. Why would you think I'm saying otherwise?
Should, on the other hand...
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Near != nearly. Compare to "narrow escape".
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Near miss? Near hit, rather....
In this context, the word "near" is not being used to mean "almost" but "close in proximity." It would be nice if the use of "near miss" would stop on the grounds that it's ambiguous (rather than necessarily wrong, which it isn't).
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It's not ambiguous. In the entire history of the English language the phrase "near miss" has only ever been used with one meaning. The fact that a small handful of misguided pedants think it should mean something different from what it obviously does mean does not make it ambiguous. The pedants are just wrong -- and even they clearly understand what the writer intended to say.
Downloadable video (Score:5, Informative)
Near Miss (Score:5, Funny)
Here's a phrase that apparently the airlines simply made up: near miss. They say that if 2 planes almost collide, it's a near miss. Bullshit, my friend. It's a near hit! A collision is a near miss.
[WHAM! CRUNCH!]
"Look, they nearly missed!"
"Yes, but not quite.”
George Carlin
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I think it means that is was a miss that was near.
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All hits are near hits
Not if you translate 'near' to mean 'nearly', and when you say "that nearly hit", that definitely implies it didn't hit.
These numbers are WAY off (Score:1)
Holy crap dude! The space station orbits at about 5% of the earth's radius
space station altitude = 370 km
radius of earth = 6384 km
I would rather NASA would catch a near-miss (Score:3)
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Yeah, NASA has never thought of this, great ideas!
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For those that will get nervous, the moon also captures some.
We have uncountable closer encounters... (Score:2)
Near-Miss? (Score:1)
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You should be able to see meteor on any night if you look long enough.
Around August 12th the annual peak (Perseids) usually yields 1 visible meteor a minute to a keen observer.
The Leonids (Nov 17) peak every 33 years at 1000 meteors and hour (16 a minute).