The Sunday Telegraph

Scientists find Earth’s ‘blind spot’ for incoming asteroids

- By Henry Bodkin

ASTRONOMER­S have identified a danger zone from which potentiall­y devastatin­g asteroids can “sneak up” on Earth undetected.

The Nasa-funded scientists found that celestial objects approachin­g from the east in the night-time sky can appear stationary because of a quirk of the Earth’s daily rotation and its journey around the sun.

It means they are not detected by the network of computeris­ed telescopes intended to look out for such threats.

The research took place after the astronomic­al community was shaken in 2019 by a “near miss”, in which an asteroid about 300ft (91 metres) wide hurtled past Earth at a distance of only 70,000km (43,000 miles). It was spotted only 24 hours previously.

The US Congress has set Nasa the task of identifyin­g 90 per cent of asteroids 460ft across or bigger, a size that could devastate a region the size of a large city or small state if it hit land.

The agency is also developing methods to prevent Earth impacts. Last year, it launched a mission to smash a spaceship into the moonlet of a comet to see if doing so would knock it off course.

The discovery comes amid a renewal of public interest in planetary collision in the wake of the Netflix film Don’t Look Up, which features Leonardo DiCaprio and Jennifer Lawrence as scientists trying to warn an unreceptiv­e public about a comet that will wipe out mankind.

Prof Richard Wainscoat, who led the research team at the University of Hawaii, said people “shouldn’t lose sleep” over the chances of being hit by a devastatin­g asteroid.

But he added: “In the event that we find something that is going to hit the Earth, we would like to do something about it. It’s not a matter of finding them and sitting there and letting it hit.”

The algorithms governing the observatio­n telescopes searching for asteroids are programmed to flag up moving objects, to avoid wrongly identifyin­g phenomena like supernovas and flare stars. These take account of the fact that objects approachin­g Earth appear to drift west in the sky because of the Earth’s eastward spin on its axis.

However, when asteroids approach Earth from a portion of the eastern sky – roughly speaking, the patch that can be seen by looking directly up at about 2am – the planet’s spin and its curved orbit around the sun can make the objects appear stationary.

Published in the journal Icarus, the study states that 50 per cent of impactors approachin­g Earth from the east can be expected to undergo periods of slow motion that may make them difficult to detect.

Were it not for the phenomenon, asteroids of the size of the 2019 body, known as 2019 OK, would be detectable up to four weeks ahead of impact.

The team conclude: “Surveys should take extra care when surveying the sky in this direction, and aggressive­ly follow up new slow-moving objects.”

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