sott.net





Featured Book:

Political Ponerology


SOTT Focus Listing

· SOTT Focus articles listed by author




Latest Topics on the Signs Forum
· Gates and Bloomberg donating millions to fight smoking worldwide
[ domivr ]
· A conflict of interest.
[ dave613 ]
· Apollo 14 Astronaut claims aliens visit earth
[ sean53 ]
· "Helping:" STS or STO?
[ mamadrama ]
· Anart that thing you said when they said then you said...giggle
[ Lirpa ]
· The Last Seduction
[ name ]
· Text Size
[ Rabelais ]
· San Francisco to vote on naming sewer after George Bush
[ axj ]

Firefox 3
This site best viewed
with Mozilla Firefox

SuperSearch Help

 

Anja Tranovich
Orlando Sentinel
Sun, 08 Apr 2007 15:12 EDT

Science & Technology

To David Morrison, a senior scientist at NASA, the Earth orbits the sun in a sort of cosmic shooting gallery. More than 1 million asteroids spin around the sun, and it is Morrison's job to figure out which of these bodies of rock, dust and metal could come crashing down on Earth.

Right now, NASA is tracking 127 asteroids that have a very small chance of striking the planet. That number is about to get a lot higher. Stronger telescopes, and a new mandate from Congress, will allow scientists to detect thousands of smaller asteroids more likely to hit Earth. And scientists are plotting ways to stop them, from "gravity tractors" to solar ray guns.

"There is no question that these will hit the Earth," says Russell Schweickart, a former Apollo astronaut who is involved in a group studying asteroids. "The question is how often we will have to do something about it." In fact, Schweickart thinks world leaders might have to do something about it very soon, within the next 15 years.

In early March, Russian, European, Japanese and American scientists held a Planetary Defense Conference in Washington to discuss the threats and plot a strategy for dealing with them.

Identifying asteroids close to the Earth is the priority right now, says Dave Jonta, a conference spokesman. A large asteroid could cause what scientists call an "impact winter": a huge volume of dust gets thrown into the atmosphere, completely or partially blocking the sun's light, causing crop loss, disease and possible global starvation. And smaller asteroids could kill hundred of thousands, if not millions of people, Schweickart says.

A group of experts, scientists, diplomats and international lawyers will meet in May to confront issues such as what country will finance asteroid-destruction missions.

One problem: Because of the difficulty in projecting an asteroid's orbit, scientists often can only predict the probability that a specific asteroid will hit the Earth. So international leaders might have to take action before knowing for certain what path an asteroid might take. "We may have to spend $300 million to fly a mission that, in the end, wasn't needed," Schweickart says, "but that's a lot better than living with a 10 percent chance that New York City will be hit."

Discuss on SOTT Forum


Reader Comments
 
(Register to add your comments!)
 
Rrigghhhtttttttt By Anart
Anart

"That number is about to get a lot higher. Stronger telescopes, and a new mandate from Congress, will allow scientists to detect thousands of smaller asteroids more likely to hit Earth."

Oh, that's why the number is about to get a lot higher, eh? It has absolutely nothing to do with a swarm headed this way - the number of NEOs isn't increasing, we're just getting better telescopes... Nothing to see here, move along....


Added: Sun, 08 Apr 2007 18:50 EDT

I Thought They Were Broke?!? By Ryan
Ryan

And yet MSNBC reports that NASA can't afford to detect all of them that are out there?

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/17473059/

Talk about mixed signals... "gotta make sure the masses don't know up from down".


Added: Mon, 09 Apr 2007 03:23 EDT


 

Donate to Signs

Donate once - or every month! Click here to learn how you can help!

Have a question or comment about the Signs page? Discuss it on the Signs of the Times news forum with the Signs Team.

Emails sent to Signs of the Times, Ark, Laura, or Cassiopaea become the property of Quantum Future Group, Inc and may be republished without notice.

Some icons appearing on this site were taken from KDE-look.org, Afterglow, Mayosoft, Everaldo, IconDrawer, VisualPharm, IconFactory, Klukeart, Icons-land, and TpdkDesign.net
.

Remember, we need your help to collect information on what is going on in your part of the world!
Send your article suggestions to: SOTT e-mail address


Original content copyright 2008 by Signs of the Times. See: Fair Use Policy

3,614 people have viewed this page since Sun, 08 Apr 2007

ATOM Feed   RSS

[Valid Atom 1.0]   [Valid RSS 2.0]