The Columbus Dispatch

Avoiding collisions still causes stress

- By Katherine Arcement

On Dec. 6, 1997, Jim Scotti of the Spacewatch program at the University of Arizona spotted an asteroid.

This wasn’t entirely unusual. The problem: It appeared the asteroid was on a possible collision course with Earth.

Asteroid 1997 XF11, as it was later called, was a big one — a mile in diameter. The Internatio­nal Astronomic­al Union’s Minor Planet Center was alerted. Other astronomer­s weighed in. After a few months of study, Brian Marsden of the Harvard-Smithsonia­n Center for Astrophysi­cs announced the asteroid discovery and warned there was a small but “not entirely out of the question” chance it would hit on Oct. 26, 2028.

On June 30, 2017 — Asteroid Day — it was worth rememberin­g that the prediction turned out to be wrong.

But for a while, Marsden’s calculatio­ns set off a panic. “Asteroid Is Expected to Make A Pass Close to Earth in 2028,” read a New York Times front page headline on March 12, 1998. The Washington Post’s story, running on an inside page, said the asteroid was “virtually certain” to come closer to Earth than the distance to the moon.

This was not good. People seemed to recall learning in elementary school that an asteroid had once wiped out dinosaurs.

“With regard to the asteroid,” wrote the Post’s Editorial Board, “we’d like a bit more reassuranc­e.”

But was Marsden right? Would the asteroid come that close?

“Sure, there was some uncertaint­y associated with the actual miss distance,” he later wrote, “but the tests that I made strongly suggested that the object would come closer than the moon.”

Eleanor Helin and Kenneth Lawrence of the Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif., looked for and found previous images of 1997 XF11 taken accidental­ly in 1990. These images, upon being analyzed by Paul Chodas and Donald Yeomans — also of JPL — ruled out the chance of collision in 2028.

“Zero chance,” was the JPL’s ruling.

Marsden and his team later acknowledg­ed they were wrong. As Dan W.E. Green of the Harvard-Smithsonia­n Center for Astrophysi­cs then told The Post: “There was no debate, of course not. ... We never disagreed. We quickly threw into our own saw that the closest approach moved out to 600,000 miles.” The danger was over. However, the debate over the XF11 affair continued. In 1998 NASA created the Near Earth Object Program Office, now the Center for Near Earth Object Studies, to find the 90 percent of so-called near-Earth objects larger than one kilometer in diameter. Congress also held hearings about the impact hazard of near earth objects.

Marsden maintained he was right to announce the presence of asteroid 1997 XF11 quickly. He wanted to make sure future observatio­ns of the asteroid wouldn’t be missed for future study.

Underestim­ating the miss distance, he wrote in 2007, “was the one and only shortcomin­g to my calculatio­ns.”

Marsden died on Nov. 18, 2010.

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