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Hevene
04-05-02, 01:35 AM
Large asteroid could hit Earth in 878 years
The asteroid is a mountain-sized piece of space rock

04/04/2002

Associated Press


WASHINGTON - A mountain-sized chunk of space rock is the only known large asteroid threatening to hit the Earth, and experts say the potential impact is more than eight centuries away with long odds that it will ever happen.

A new look at an asteroid named 1950 DA shows that it is the most likely of all of the known asteroids at least six-tenths of a mile wide to smash into the Earth, researchers said Thursday in the journal Science.

The study predicts the path of the asteroid as it orbits the sun over many centuries and finds there is a 1 in 300 chance it will hit Earth in the year 2880.

"One in 300 is pretty long odds," said Jon D. Giorgini, a scientist at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif., and the first author of the study. "I'm not personally going to worry about it. It is so far in the future that lots of things could change."

Tom Morgan, chief scientist of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration's small planet program, said there are an estimated 1,000 asteroids bigger than six-tenths of mile that can pass near the Earth in their orbit of the sun. About 580 have been found and their orbits plotted. Of these, only 1950 DA represents a possible threat. Morgan said NASA continues an effort to identify all the other large asteroids that pass near Earth.
"It is my great hope that we don't find any that are greater threats," Morgan said.

If 1950 DA did hit the Earth, said Giorgini, it would create an explosive release of energy equal to 100,000 megatons of TNT. This would have planetwide effects, he said, setting off fires, changing the weather and perhaps creating immense tidal waves. But it would not be a planet killer like the asteroid thought to have snuffed out the dinosaurs some 65 million years ago. That asteroid was about 16 times larger than 1950 DA, he said.

In any case, said Giorgini, if scientists determine in the coming centuries that 1950 DA does represent a threat, there'll be plenty of time to take action.

"This is not an urgent thing," Giorgini said. "We can spend a century thinking about it, another century deciding who is going to do something and then another century figuring out what to do. Three hundred years from now -- we can't even imagine how they will handle the problem."

Asteroid 1950 DA was first discovered on Feb. 23, 1950, but then not noted in astronomy logs again for decades. It was rediscovered in 2000 and in March 2001 whizzed within about 77 million miles of Earth, giving astronomers a chance to gather visual and radar readings.

From that, the astronomers projected the orbital path 1950 DA would take on its next 15 near passes of the Earth -- over a period covering nearly nine centuries.

For the 15th near pass, on March 16, 2880, the analysis showed it was mathematically possible, though unlikely, that the asteroid could hit the Earth.

"What we are predicting is like figuring out a 15-bank shot in a game of pool," said Giorgini. "We can predict the first 13 banks really well, but it is the last few that we need to know more about."

More observations and perhaps close-up views will improve the accuracy of the prediction.

"Once we know more about the physical properties of the asteroid -- what it's made of and how it spins -- then we can refine that 15th bounce. But it may take decades to get that kind of information," Giorgini said.

He said the highest probability is that the asteroid in the year 2880 will miss the Earth by about 180,000 miles -- a distance closer than the 230,000-mile orbit of the Moon around the Earth.

But the range of mathematical probabilities also include a possible impact.

The asteroid's orbit carries it around the sun every 2.2 years. It passes within 77 million miles of the sun and then loops back into space, passing Mars' orbit and reaching a point some 241 million miles from the sun.

http://www.dallasnews.com/latestnews/stories/040402dnnatasteroid.41c16519.html

From other sources
http://www.floridatoday.com/news/space/stories/2002a/040402asteroid.htm
http://c.moreover.com/click/here.pl?j35339214&w=1

mythodea
04-05-02, 10:53 PM
interesting concept....but dont you think in 878years from now...we should be able to get out of its way?

Hevene
04-05-02, 11:10 PM
We should be able to develop some form of weapon to maybe destroy it or to change it's course, it's another 878 years!!! May be by the time, we will be living in some other planet in another galaxy, then we wouldn't have to worry about it. :rolleyes:

wet1
04-05-02, 11:37 PM
At the pace of present tech we will definitely be moving around the system in give or take 800 years. That is a long time and any long-range predictions would be pretty much useless to make. No one can take into account those unexplained "breakthroughs" that predictive logic would say wouldn't happen. At the speed we now learn and make use of that learned tech makes how it was say a century ago as slow as a snail. When I was going through high school you could look for some new learned tech to be mentioned in text books close to a generation or so going by what was mentioned in the books as the latest. Now a couple of years seem to be more accurate. It will only increase in speed as time passes. Whether we go the as mechanized beings or send AI's in our stead will not change the fact we will see what is out there. It is a matter of how far not if.

The matter of a NEO arriving on a collision course with the earth will soon (in historic terms) be solved. The ability to do something about will also be available by that time. Given enough distance from the earth it could be blown to gravel and while a shotgun pattern would exist, the majority would only provide some pretty lights across the sky. Stretching a reflective cover over one side would probably have the desired effect without having to do anything so drastic as blowing it up. Mining is yet another possibility.