Astronomers are developing an ingenious system to pulverise asteroids that they believe is the “Earth’s only chance in catastrophe “.
” So far , humanity has been spared large-scale catastrophe as was visited upon our previous tenants, but coming upon being ‘lucky’ is a poor strategy in the longer term”, said Professor Philip Lubin from the university of California Santa Barbara.
The experiment will be conducted on Trojan asteroids that can be wanderers in the solar system or material left over from their home planet’s formation .They become ensnared by the planetary gravitational grip and subsequently orbit the sun along the same path as planet.
“In short intercept scenarios , the asteroid fragments of maximum -10 meter [about 33ft] diameter allow the Earth’s atmosphere to act as a ‘beam dump’ where the fragments either burn up in the atmosphere or air burst , with the primary channel of energy going into spatially and temporally de-correlated shock waves” Lubin said
“The effectiveness of the approach depends on the time to intercept and size of the asteroid , but allows for effective defense against asteroids in the multi-hundred-meter diameter class and could virtually eliminate the threats of mass destruction caused by these threats.
“compared to other threat reduction scenarios , this approach represents an extremely cost-effective ,testable and deployable approach with a logical roadmap of development and testing. Pre-development of the system into orbit or a lunar base allows for rapid response on the order of less than a day if needed,” Lubin said .
“The great advantage of this approach is that it allows for terminal defense in the event of short warning times and target distance mitigation where orbital deflection is not feasible,” said Lubin.
‘ Even intercepts as close as the moon with intercept times of a few hours prior to impact are viable.”
The National Aeronautics and Space Administration has also launched a test mission DART spacecraft that they hope will alter an asteroid’s trajectory with sheer kinetic force , plowing into it at high speed to nudge the space boulder off course just enough to keep our planet of harm’s way .
The asteroid that DART is aiming for poses non actual threat and is tiny compared with the cataclysmic Chicxulub asteroid that struck Earth some 66 million years ago , leading to extinction of the dinosaurs .But scientists say smaller asteroids are far more common and of greater theoretical concern in the near term.
DART’s target is an asteroid “moonlet” the size of football stadium that orbits a chunk of rock five times larger in a binary asteroid system named Didymos, the Greek word for Twin.
The term behind DART ,short for Double Asteroid Redirection Test , chose the Didymos system because its relative proximity to Earth and dual – asteroid configuration make it ideal for observing the results of the impact.
The plan is to fly the DART Spacecraft directly into the moonlet , called Dimorphos , at 15,000 miles per hour (24,000 kph), bumping it hard enough to shift its orbital; track around the largest asteroid.
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