What If You Could See Asteroids In the Night Sky? 54
An anonymous reader writes: As part of Asteroid Day a 360-degree video rendering the night sky with the population of near-earth asteroids included has been created by 'Astronogamer' Scott Manley. The video shows how the Earth flies through a cloud of asteroids on its journey around the sun, and yet we've only discovered about 1% of the near earth asteroid population.
We'd probably be more on protecting ourselves. (Score:1)
Re:We'd probably be more on protecting ourselves. (Score:4, Funny)
Yeah, right. I'm pretty sure that's not going to happen any time so{#`%${%&`+'${`%&NO CARRIER
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Civilization will probably be greatly affected by something sometime, but there's no way to know what. Asteroid? Pandemic? Solar flare? Nuclear war? So it's important to plan _wisely_. Don't choose one catastrophe and focus all your effort on it, because it won't be the one that gets you.
So, once we have identified all known possible catastrophes, we can discount them. And there's nothing we can do about unknown catastrophes, so we just don't do anything at all.
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I've near cities all my life. So everything in the sky is pretty much "out of sight, out of mind" to me. I didn't know what the Milky Way was until I saw a picture of it in a book.
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Go out for camping, travel to different countries. See the world!
How do we know we've only discovered 1% of NEAs? (Score:5, Interesting)
The video shows how the Earth flies through a cloud of asteroids on its journey around the sun, and yet we've only discovered about 1% of the near earth asteroid population.
Ok, how do we know what we haven't discovered yet? I know statistical techniques for estimating population sizes of wildlife. (Catch some number, tag and release, catch a bunch more and see how many tagged ones you catch which gives you a population estimate) I'm not sure those techniques are applicable here. Anybody have any idea how this estimate was arrived at or is it taken straight out of someone's derriere? Measurements of orbit perturbations? Something else?
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It is still not much more reliable than a WAG. Obviously it isn't a wild guess and is based on fairly sound logic but it really is nothing more than a guess when you get down to it. There is no way to be certain that one is missing an area with a heavy concentration of NEO objects. There is simply no way to be certain. Even hazarding a guess seems counterintuitive, what does it benefit to spread the misinformation about there being only 1% discovered? Theoretically we could have discovered them all. We coul
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It's not that hard, you know how much of the sky you've looked at. You know the sizes, positions, and velocities of all the asteroids you've cataloged. From there it's a non-trivial but certainly doable calculation to come up with an estimate of the total number.
Assumptions or inferences? (Score:2)
It's not that hard, you know how much of the sky you've looked at. You know the sizes, positions, and velocities of all the asteroids you've cataloged. From there it's a non-trivial but certainly doable calculation to come up with an estimate of the total number.
That only works if you have some way to make reasonable assumptions or statistical inferences about what is in the bits of the sky you haven't looked. It's not clear to me if such assumptions are appropriate here since we've routinely been surprised by what we find in bits of the sky where we haven't looked carefully. Plus isn't part of the problem just that asteroids can be really hard to see even when we are looking right at them?
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And you assume that you found ALL the asteroids in the sky you've looked at.
Also, asteroids that moved into your field of study.
Re:How do we know we've only discovered 1% of NEAs (Score:5, Insightful)
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Re:How do we know we've only discovered 1% of NEAs (Score:4, Informative)
data from impact areas on moon, discovery rate, increase in counts with improvement in instruments are some factors:
http://www.lsst.org/lsst/publi... [lsst.org]
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Same way we "know" that 80% of rape victims never report it.
We pull a number out of our ass that will help promote the current agenda.
Yeah, those evil SJWs and feminazis with their "anti-rape" agenda. Whatever happened to free choice?
Oh, wait...
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I clicked on your first link to double check something and I am not sure that I agree with your view. No, we do not know the total mass of the solar system. We have a working hypothesis but this is not knowing. We could be right, we could be wrong. Additionally, there is no limit to what could be coming in from other solar systems so concluding that we know the original mass seems, to me at least, to be of absolutely no importance when it comes to estimating the prevalence or rate of the occurance of NEO. I
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If I were doing this, I'd have a probe go through the asteroid belt and catalogue the number of asteroids it identifies. Then I'd compare that to the number I'd catalogued previously. That misses rogue asteroids, of course, and assumes that asteroid distribution is uniform throughout the belt.
See with what equipment (Score:2)
If we can see an asteroid with the naked eye it might be time to duck.
Its almost certainly too late to call B ruce Willis
And if you're on the asteroid itself... (Score:3)
Carter, I can see my house! [youtube.com]
Re:See with what equipment (Score:5, Informative)
There is one asteroid, Vesta, which can be seen every couple of years or so by people with decent (not exceptional) naked eye eyesight. I've seen it a few times, you just need to know exactly where to look and a have a bit of stargazing experience at picking out faint objects. Its last opposition was in April 2014. Without looking it up I'd guess the next is in late 2015 or early 2016.
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Yeah, the dinosaurs got a really good view of one.
If you can see asteroids (Score:2)
that means the Vorlons are using mass drivers to attack your home world.
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that means the Vorlons are using mass drivers to attack your home world.
I'm pretty sure that was the Centauri. Vorlons developed a sudden habit of blowing up planets instead.
while video is great it is biased (Score:3, Informative)
First, Scott does not mention, that most dangerous asteroids are found
>95% of 1 km size asteroids
>90% for 500 m size asteroids
~60-70% 300 m size asteroids
so yes, we know 1% of asteroids, but still - the danger now for a person to be killed by asteroid is more than 100 times less, than it was two decades ago
another problem with his video, that he omits to mention, that inner asteroids are either harmless, or if they intersect earth orbit - they could be tracked at dusk/dawn ( just like venus is visible - and venus is quite far from being able to hit earth, so closer asteroids and relatively big asteroids are easier to find )
then about finding inner asteroids with space crafts - it is not just B612 foundation, which deals with that , but there are other proposals
http://arxiv.org/abs/1503.0794... [arxiv.org] - which is really cheap ( though idea requires some more development )
or http://xxx.lanl.gov/abs/1501.0... [lanl.gov] neocam - the paper has a proof that it is somewhat more realistic than B612 proposal and is not less efficient.
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...so yes, we know 1% of asteroids, but still - the danger now for a person to be killed by asteroid is more than 100 times less, than it was two decades ago
Actually, the danger to a person being killed by an asteroid is not changed. That won't happen until some technology is developed to deal with them. But, at least we would know the end is coming.
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>Actually, the danger to a person being killed by an asteroid is not changed.
it changed - there are statistically only 6 asteroids out ~30 000 most big which could hit earth and do intersect earth orbit ( others just fly near - but not about to hit ).
Now we know that 95% 1km won't hit, this the probability that there are no dangerous 1 km asteroid now in collision course - is much higher. Then iff we know orbits of 100% of all 1 km asteroids - even if we don't have means to deflect them, but know that
Re:while video is great it is biased (Score:4, Insightful)
Whether we knew/know about an asteroid strike doesn't change whether the strike will occur. As such, the actual likelihood of an asteroid hit is the same, either way. What has changed is our knowledge that it is going to occur.
Put differently, there are a finite number of asteroids in the solar system. If one othem is on a trajectory that will eventually impact the earth, the likelihood of an earth impact is unchanged whether we know it or not. Likewise, if none of them are on a trajectory to impact earth, the likelihood of an earth impact is unchanged whether we know it or not.
At this point in time, there are only two options - either the earth will be hit or it will never be hit. The more we know about the asteroids and their trajectories does not change those results (unless by knowing, we have a means to divert the collision, which currently, we can't).
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Actually, the danger to a person being killed by an asteroid is not changed. That won't happen until some technology is developed to deal with them. But, at least we would know the end is coming.
The danger of a given person getting killed has not changed, but the chance of a person getting killed may have increased slightly with the increase in human population.
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That is because Scott Manley is only a self-proclaimed astronomer. He has no degrees or credentials of any kind to support that claim.
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No, he has a degree ( as he somewhere explained ), but rather likes b612 as a private company ( he is himself is not from government)
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He doesn't have a degree in astronomy though. Otherwise he wouldn't be working as a web developer and additionally claiming to be a "Hacker, DJ, Astronomer, Dad, Scotsman, Capsuleer".
Sorry, but I don't trust a thing this guy says. He's not legit.
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Non-sequitur much, dumbfuck? What the fuck does posting as AC, the only way I can post since I have no account, have to do with anything?
It means we cannot see your face so we can poo on it, because you squatted and did a poo on Scott Manley because you claim he lacks the "scientific credentials" that enable him to poo properly for science --- despite the clear evidence that he has created a visualization useful to inquiry and debate, has documented his methods and made clear his reasons for pursuing the quest.
Great minds poo ideas.
Average minds just poo.
Small minds post as AC to squirt liquified poo on those they consider unworthy in the ho
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You Could See Asteroids In the Night Sky...
I would... (Score:1)
What if... you could see how little we care? (Score:2)
I'm still not sure how In intend to celebrate the IMPENDING DISMAL FAILURE of the EADP Mission fund raiser [indiegogo.com] to raise $200k for producing a set of plans to for a viable asteroid deflection/destruction mission. Win or lose, something besides NOTHING ready to deploy on short notice. What kind of cake would be appropriate for this level of fail?
185 people have contributed $8,803 of $200k. Two of them are me.
WHAT IF a simple test appeared out of the blue one day... something that you could not ignore. Despite any