Manila Bulletin

US preparing for asteroid apocalypse

-

Among Earth’s natural disasters – hurricanes, floods, earthquake­s – the one humans probably ponder least is asteroids, huge objects zipping through our solar system at ludicrous speeds.

Federal officials call an asteroid or comet collision “low probabilit­y but high consequenc­e,” NASA-speak for it will probably never happen, but if it does we’re toast. With that in mind, the US and other nations have long sought to track such “near-Earth objects,” or NEOs, coordinati­ng efforts through the Internatio­nal Asteroid Warning Network and the United Nations.

The Trump administra­tion now wants to enhance those efforts to detect and track potential planet killers, and to develop more capable means to deflect any that appear to be on a collision course.

“Fortunatel­y, this type of destructiv­e event

is extremely rare,” said Aaron Miles, an official with the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy. But just to be safe, the government unveiled new goals this week for NASA’s work on countering NEOs over the next decade. If you’re envisionin­g Bruce Willis or humming an Aerosmith song, please stop. This is serious.

The asteroid DA14 passed within 17,000 miles of Earth in 2013, closer than the moon and many orbiting satellites.

More than 300,000 objects larger than 40 meters (131 feet) wide orbit the sun as NEOs, according to NASA estimates, with many being difficult to detect more than a few days in advance. Forty meters is about the average size an object must be to make it through the atmosphere without burning up; thousands of much-smaller meteors disintegra­te harmlessly each day far above the planet. The meteor that injured more than 1,000 people in Chelyabins­k, Russia in February, 2013, mainly by glass shattered from the shock wave of its explosion, was believed to be about 20 meters wide (65 feet).

The most recent encounter with an asteroid was on June 2, when a 2-meter boulder dubbed 2018 LA entered the atmosphere at 10 miles per second (38,000 mph) and exploded over Botswana.

OK, now here’s the good news: NASA has documented roughly 96 percent of the objects large enough to cause a global catastroph­e since work began in 1998, said Lindley Johnson, planetary defense officer at NASA’s Planetary Defense Coordinati­on Office. On Thursday alone, five massive asteroids zipped within 4.6 million miles of Earth – which is pretty close in space – including one called 2017 YE5, a 1,600-foot wide behemoth that, if it paid us a visit, would ruin everyone’s day. But NASA has its number.

Also good news: This growing catalog of potentiall­y Armageddon-causing (don’t do it – the movie was terrible) objects offers the world years of notice about when an orbit would intercept Earth, given the immense distances asteroids and comets travel through space. For example, 101955 Bennu, a 1,600-foot wide carbon asteroid found in 1999 and which figures prominentl­y in NASA’s current deep-space research, has only a 1-in-24,000 chance of hitting Earth— and that’s 157 years from now.

Today, NASA’s catalog contains 18,310 NEOs, with about 8,000 of them classified as 140 meters wide and larger. That’s the size at which enormous regional impacts and mass casualties would occur if one hit. How government agencies would prepare for such a calamity is a novelty to most.

“One of the key things we’re finding is that, for emergency managers, this is so different we have to first educate them,” said Leviticus Lewis, a response coordinato­r with the Federal Emergency Management Agency.

Now, more bad news: A chance remains that large comets from the outer solar system could suddenly appear and hit Earth with only a few months’ warning. There’s also the potential for a surprise from deep space – an object whose orbit isn’t bound by the sun – like the kind that showed up last October. That’s when Oumuamua, a 400-meter, cigar-shaped oddity, whizzed past the sun at almost 200,000 mph. The intriguing object was the first known to have come from interstell­ar space, to which it is now returning.

So can we do anything? NASA has devised three strategies for potentiall­y sparing Earth annihilati­on by asteroid, with each method’s effectiven­ess determined by the size and compositio­n of an asteroid and how much warning there is.

Now, more bad news: A chance remains that large comets from the outer solar system could suddenly appear and hit Earth with only a few months’ warning. There’s also the potential for a surprise from deep space – an object whose orbit isn’t bound by the sun – like the kind that showed up last October. That’s when Oumuamua, a 400-meter, cigar-shaped oddity, whizzed past the sun at almost 200,000 mph. The intriguing object was the first known to have come from interstell­ar space, to which it is now returning.

So can we do anything? NASA has devised three strategies for potentiall­y sparing Earth annihilati­on by asteroid, with each method’s effectiven­ess determined by the size and compositio­n of an asteroid and how much warning there is.

The asteroid DA14 passed within 17,000 miles of Earth in 2013, closer than the moon and many orbiting satellites.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines