The Mercury News

Asteroid-spotting tech could help save the world

- By Robin George Andrews

The ability of technology to solve global problems is often overhyped. But when it comes to saving the world from asteroid strikes, lines of code may prove to be our savior.

Telescopes surveying the skies for errant space rocks are overseen by astronomer­s, but their systematic movements are driven by ones and zeros. With so much inky sky to peruse, scientists rely on algorithms to spot suspicious and speedy objects, including asteroids that may threaten Earth.

Convention­al algorithms need four images, taken during a single night, of a moving object to confirm whether it's a genuine space rock. But new software developed by researcher­s at the University of Washington cuts the number of necessary nightly observatio­ns by half, boosting the ability of observator­ies to quickly identify these lithic projectile­s. And the program, named HelioLinc3­D, has already found a near-Earth asteroid that older surveys had missed.

Analyzing data from the NASA-funded ATLAS (Asteroid Terrestria­l-impact Last Alert System) survey, the program spotted an asteroid that ATLAS and similar surveys had failed to see — one 600 feet long, the type that could devastate a large city.

Named 2022 SF289, the asteroid is classified as “potentiall­y hazardous,” based on its size and proximity. But although this asteroid's closest approach is within 140,000 miles of Earth's orbit, half the distance to the moon, there is no impact risk for the next century and very likely for many millennium­s in the future.

HelioLinc3­D won't just bolster the efforts of preexistin­g asteroid surveys. It was specifical­ly designed for the Vera C. Rubin Observator­y in Chile. The observator­y's huge mirror, massive camera and expansive eye will see pretty much everything in the night sky in unpreceden­ted detail, from far-flung collapsing stars to sketchy-looking asteroids swimming in our galactic backwater.

Hoping to catalog as many objects as possible, the Rubin telescope is designed to speedily sweep across the sky each night. Without HelioLinc3­D, the observator­y would be unable to reveal the asteroid-filled neighborho­od around our planet. “The discovery of 2022 SF289 is the proof,” said Ari Heinze, the principal developer of HelioLinc3­D and a researcher at the University of Washington.

The world's family of asteroid-hunting telescopic surveys has so far found more than 32,000 near-Earth asteroids. Most of those capable of inflicting planet-scale devastatio­n have been found because it's easier to spot bigger rocks glinting in sunlight.

But asteroids at least 460 feet long — those with the potential to wipe out cities or small countries, should they impact Earth — are far fainter and are considerab­ly more difficult to locate. They are mostly undiscover­ed at present, with about 10,500 found out of a projected total of roughly 25,000.

The four images in a single night required by convention­al survey algorithms to detect asteroids aren't always possible because of inclement weather conditions, an object's extreme faintness or the glare of a brighter star or galaxy. And so an asteroid can be captured in multiple survey images across many nights and still go unrecogniz­ed — not ideal for planetary defense.

The Rubin Observator­y, set to begin its 10-year survey of the sky in 2025, can see exceedingl­y faint objects, including asteroids with city-killing potential.

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