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NASA Space

Can NASA Protect Earth from Catastrophic Asteroid Collisions? (scientificamerican.com) 92

An anonymous reader quotes Qz: NASA is not going to be able to find all the asteroids big enough to cause serious devastation on Earth by 2020 -- or even 2033. Also: For a hypothetical attempt to send a spacecraft to divert an seriously dangerous incoming asteroid, we'll need a ten year heads-up to build it and get it to the asteroid.

The good news? They're working on it. "If a real threat does arise, we are prepared to pull together the information about what options might work and provide that information to decision-makers," Lindley Johnson, NASA's Planetary Defense Officer, told reporters.

But NASA's methodology is now being criticized by former Microsoft CTO Nathan Myhrvold -- in the peer-reviewed journal Icarus. An anonymous reader quotes Scientific American: Since 2016, Nathan Myhrvold has argued that there are fatal flaws in the data from NASA's NEOWISE mission to hunt space rocks... NASA is working to develop a follow-up space telescope that would use the same scientific approach to fulfill a mandate from the US Congress to discover nearly all of the space rocks that could pose a threat to Earth.

After 18 months of peer review, and plenty of acrimony on both sides, Myhrvold's latest critique appeared on 22 May on the website of the journal Icarus. Among other things, he argues that NEOWISE estimates of asteroid diameters should not be trusted -- a crucial challenge, because the size of an asteroid determines how much damage it would cause if it hit Earth. "These observations are the best we're going to have for a very long time," says Myhrvold. "And they weren't really analysed very well at all."

NASA hasn't responded in detail to Myhrvold's criticism, though a June 14th statement said their team "stands by its data and scientific findings," noting that they'd also been published in several peer-reviewed journals.
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Can NASA Protect Earth from Catastrophic Asteroid Collisions?

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  • by paiute ( 550198 ) on Saturday June 23, 2018 @05:57PM (#56835238)
    NASA: There is an ELE rock inbound.
    White House/Congress: What's it going to cost?
    NASA: 100 trillion.
    WH/C: Fake News!

    BOOM!
  • by Qbertino ( 265505 ) <moiraNO@SPAMmodparlor.com> on Saturday June 23, 2018 @06:03PM (#56835260)

    ... we're likely doomed. Plain and simple. We won the big lottery and we've had realive "asteroid peace" for a few million years now which had us evolve into quite smart apes but if some solid rock with a diameter of 1000+ meters comes at earth with 50000 kmh it's gonna hurt.

    Given, if we'd prepare for this sort of event we'd quickly be in a position to prevent it. But since we - right now - can't even get it down to stop dumping crap into the oceans and poisining the atmossphere, I wouldn't bet on that happening anytime soon. As long as idiots are still caught up in little more than extended tribal wars humanity won't move to that position. I sure hope we survive long enough to make that happen, but some sceptisizm and paranoia is due IMHO.

    If humanity does move on to becoming smart, we could also finally make a concerted effort to become a space faring civilisation. Maybe not beyond our solar system, but space faring none-the-less.

    • Well spoken.

      Moreover, I am going to place a heck of a lot more trust in the the nerds as NASA, over a ex-CTO, because...oh wait....they are ACTUAL fucking rocket scientists. I'm sure that Nathan is clever and all, but I don't see anything in his CV that suggests that he is anything more than an armchair quarterback with 'opinions'.
  • ... that would take science and money.

    Sorry.

    • Re:No ... (Score:4, Insightful)

      by PolygamousRanchKid ( 1290638 ) on Saturday June 23, 2018 @06:43PM (#56835356)

      ... that would take science and money.

      Congress Critters would waste precious time arguing about which states get the contracts to build the "Asteroiderator Killer".

      . . . and then we'd end up with 50 incompatible components built in 50 different states.

      "Thanks for all the fish!"

  • Nasa can't protect the USA from it; but the Space Force CAN ;)
    • by Anonymous Coward

      I'd have more faith in a new military branch with a zillion-dollar budget that it needs to figure out how to spend to make progress in space than NASA, which seemingly only exist anymore to get its budget cut (and to virtue signal about its newfound commitment to diversity).

      Whatever you think about all the useless billion-dollar fighter planes we piss away money on, you can't deny they're fucking cool as hell. The only reason we ever got to the moon was to win a cold war pissing contest with Russia; give

  • by See Attached ( 1269764 ) on Saturday June 23, 2018 @06:38PM (#56835340)
    We should be concerned about the size of the asteroid as the energy contained therein is proportional to the mass, but its proportional to the SQUARE of the speed... so we should be concerned with the size, but fascinated by the speed of the inbound. First,. it cuts down on our reaction time, second, speed is what brings the energy. Did like NM's treatise on Supersonic Lizard tails though: https://www.livescience.com/52... [livescience.com] - I think I'd be twice as eccentric with half the cash!!!
    • A large slow asteroid is going to get more energy to the ground than a smaller faster one.
      • For both the formula is E = m * v^2 (m = mass, v = velocity, that was obvious, wasn't it?)
        So to make your statement true you need to cherry pick nice values for m and v ... what else did you miss in school? (Hint: halving the mass and doubling the speed doubles the energy, a bit counterintuitive, don't you think so?)

        • Ever hear of ballistic coefficient? Yeah its a thing... plus the higher velocity meteor is more likely to explode in the atmosphere. Obviously you have been schooled stupid....
          • Any incoming projectile with enough energy to cause global devastation is more than likely large enough to make it through the atmosphere mostly unscathed. That's because it's highly unlikely that an incoming solid object will have a velocity above that of high-speed comets relative to the earth, around 70 km/s.

            If you could find some natural process that accelerates macroscopic objects to much higher speeds than that, then maybe your argument would have some relevance.

            The problem today is: NASA probably isn

          • If an asteroid/meteor explodes depends on many things.
            I gave you the energy formula. Now google yourself.
            Whether a meteorite hits the ground depends mostly on its size ...
            Here e.g. is an interesting read, not sure that you comprehend it, though :P https://physics.stackexchange.... [stackexchange.com]

    • by Zocalo ( 252965 )
      Knowing the size, while a useful data point to have, doesn't really tell us all that much about the damage an asteroid is going to cause should it happen hit us, and actually seems like it would be a pretty poor metric of grading the probable damage in the event of an impact. What you also *need* to know for a probable impact damage assessment is the angle of impact (how much of the mass will be lost on entry, or will it just bounce off the atmosphere), composition (how much will burn up/probability of bre
  • by dwywit ( 1109409 ) on Saturday June 23, 2018 @07:22PM (#56835472)

    NASA, an organisation with decades of experience with space-related matters, and decades of data from manned and unmanned missions, some fuckups but mostly glorious successes, or the ex-CTO of a company with a reputation for, well, a reputation like Microsoft's?

    Microsoft have been known to produce some good products, but they should *never* be first port of call when seeking technical solutions, or considering software.

    He probably wants counter-asteroid systems to all be running some version of Windows.

    • "Microsoft have been known to produce some good products, "

      They've been known to buy some good products, stick their name on them, and then ruin them after a few years. They even managed to run windows 7 for the average user by turning Windows update into a malware delivery platform.

  • For a hypothetical attempt to send a spacecraft to divert an seriously dangerous incoming asteroid, we'll need a ten year heads-up

    I am certain it would take less than a few weeks to decide a nuclear strike against an asteroid.

    • by HiThere ( 15173 )

      You better know the composition and structural strength if you're going to decide that a nuclear blast would do more good than harm.

      If it were largely methane type stuff, then a nuclear blast off to one side would likely be better than direct impact. If it's iron, you'd better think of another approach.

      P.S.: Breaking it into fragments doesn't reduce the impact energy. It may cause it to spread, but it won't reduce it. (Of course, some of the fragments may have their orbit altered enough to miss us this

      • Comment removed based on user account deletion
        • by HiThere ( 15173 )

          Yeah, and depending on the size that might be significant. With a really large one, though, impact energy is the problem unless you can REALLY spread things around, probably to the extent that most if it will miss us this time around.

          A prior respondent suggested that this might be done with multiple nuclear explosions, and "maybe". The problem is you only get one chance to change the velocities of the pieces, so the follow on has to count on vaporizing them. You're after heat rather than explosive force,

          • That's why you have to send Bruce Willis and his boys to do the drilling.

            Of course the radiation will kill them after they get the job done. Still bet you'd find people who would do it, just for the cred.

      • You better know the composition and structural strength if you're going to decide that a nuclear blast would do more good than harm.

        I do not know if a nuclear blast is the right approach. I am just confident this is the one that will be chosen.

      • Breaking up an asteroid spreads out the energy over multiple incidents. If you make the fragments small enough they might all burn up in the atmosphere rather than making groundfall. Maybe turning an extinction level event into a bunch of city killers. That's a good trade.

  • If Clint Eastwood, Tommy Lee Jones, Donald Sutherland and James Garner can't do it, no one can. Not even the Gangster of Love...
  • If we use our understanding of the past as a predictor, we could estimate that such an extinction event might occur every 1,460 billion days (4 billion years). There has only been one such event thus far and many life forms survived, including many mammals. We may have to wait even longer for the next one. But hey, we have nothing else to worry about so have at it!

  • It is nice to see that the Obama-era plan has been fleshed out and in the current plan [whitehouse.gov] the real rubber-hits-the-road moment is,

    3.4 Identify, assess the readiness of, estimate in the costs of, and propose development paths for key technologies required by NEO impact prevention concepts. This assessment should include the most mature in-space concepts --- kinetic impactors, nuclear devices, and gravity tractors for deflection, and nuclear devices for disruption -- as well as less mature NEO impact prevention methods. Technology assessments should consider contemporary work, including potential synergies with relevant private industry interests (e.g., asteroid mining). They should also consider NEO impact scenarios that may have received insufficient attention thus far (e.g., binary asteroids, high-speed comets). [Short term; NASA, NNSA, DoD]

    Asteroid interception is where the goofiest ideas emerge to monopolize discussion and take debate away from practical ideas that would give us a chance of survival in all cases. When you interrupt geeks talking about their favorite solution, something like deploying solar sails to nudge asteroids, to point out their scenario is for an extremely narrow case and it would be irresp

    • 1. kinetic impactor rockets loaded with payloads of simple Lunar dirt

      Lunar soil is mass, but without a hard external jacket, it is going to crumble on impact and not behave like a rigid body. You probably want a inelastic collision to occur, not an elastic collision. Most space ships are made of very light material to save cost / fuel / delta V, it will be VERY expensive to ship vast quantities of 'bullets' to the moon with dense enough bodies that will not fragment on impact. The faster they are going
      • Good news, that isn't the only way to make space ships. We've even stockpiled plenty of 'fuel'.
      • by Kjella ( 173770 )

        So aside from the fact your idea probably just won't work, is incredibly expensive to build and maintain, and we already have vast amounts of nuclear weapons already built that are way more efficient in terms of energy deliverable, your idea isn't a bad one. I give you full points for a creative solution to the problem.

        I think he missed the fact that we don't have any process to create fuel on the moon so we have to ship it from Earth. TLI -> LLO: 0.82 km/s, LLO -> moon: 1.87 km/s and the same in reverse to launch and break orbit, if you plug 2.69 km/s into the rocket equation you get ~50% fuel. So you can send 4 kg fuel, land 2 kg of it and use that to launch 1 kg Lunar dirt. But it would make a lot more sense to just launch 4 kg Earth dirt.

        If Musk realizes the BFR with full refueling it's pretty much the perfect a

        • If Musk realizes the BFR with full refueling it's pretty much the perfect asteroid defense, it should fit 5x Tsar Bomba and have roughly a 500MT yield while having the delta-v to actually deliver it. Maybe even more with a modern design, that one was just a rush job of many smaller bomb designs going off at once. Of course the power of 500 * 10^9 kg TNT isn't much against a dino killer estimated at 10^15 kg. That's one kilo of TNT to 2000 kg of rock, but should be enough to give it a nudge.

          Exactly. You a
  • The way things are going these days perhaps the cosmos hitting the reset button on earth would be a good thing.
  • “I’ve got a patent on 87% of the likely ways NASA would try to stop an asteroid, and a dozen east Texas lawyers on hot standby. To hell with trolling individuals... the US government has the deepest pockets of all!”

  • That's what we need. Just make sure it's controlled by musical notes and only one person on the planet is given the knowledge of how to operate it.

Two can Live as Cheaply as One for Half as Long. -- Howard Kandel

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