ScienceDaily: Latest Science News
Breaking science news and articles on global warming, extrasolar planets, stem cells, bird flu, autism, nanotechnology, dinosaurs, evolution -- the latest discoveries in astronomy, anthropology, biology, chemistry, climate and environment, computers, engineering, health and medicine, math, physics, psychology, technology, and more -- from the world's leading universities and research organizations.
New NASA mission to help us better estimate asteroid impact hazard
http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/~3/BnqtUlHBYfg/130208112058.htm
Feb 8th 2013, 16:20
Feb. 8, 2013 — Every year, sensors designed to detect nuclear explosions see harmless bursts in Earth's upper atmosphere from the breakup of an asteroid a few yards across. Tiny asteroids are much more numerous than big ones, so destructive hits to Earth are very rare. However, because of their potential for devastation, NASA's Near-Earth Object (NEO) observations program supports surveys which are undertaking sustained searches to find the largest objects and predict their impact threat to Earth.
According to NASA's NEO program, there are more than 1,300 "Potentially Hazardous Asteroids" (PHAs) -- objects at least 150 yards (about 140 meters) across with a very small chance of impacting us someday because their orbital paths take them close to Earth's orbit.
"Asteroids move at an average of 12 to 15 kilometers per second (about 27,000 to 33,000 miles per hour) relative to Earth, so fast that they carry enormous energy by virtue of their velocity," says Edward Beshore of the University of Arizona, Tucson, deputy principal investigator for NASA's OSIRIS-REx asteroid sample return mission. "Anything over a few hundred yards across that appears to be on a collision course with Earth is very worrisome."
The main difficulty is obtaining sufficient observations to be able to predict their orbits with enough certainty to find out if they could hit us at some point.
"When an asteroid makes a close pass to Earth, the gravitational pull from our planet changes the asteroid's orbit," says Beshore. "However, how this change will affect the evolution of the asteroid's orbit is difficult for us to predict because there are also other small forces continuously acting on the asteroid to change its orbit. The most significant of these smaller forces is the Yarkovsky effect -- a minute push on an asteroid that happens when it is warmed up by the sun and then later re-radiates this heat in a different direction as infrared radiation."
The Yarkovsky effect happens simply because it takes time for things to heat up and cool down. Objects tend to be coldest just before dawn and warmest at mid-afternoon, after hours of illumination by the high sun. "A brick building can feel warm even in the early evening hours, because it is radiating away the heat accumulated from an entire day of sunshine," says Beshore. In the same way, an asteroid radiates most of its heat from its late "afternoon side," giving it the small Yarkovsky push which is variable depending mostly on the asteroid's size, shape and composition.
NASA's OSIRIS-REx mission (Origins, Spectral Interpretation, Resource Identification, Security, and Regolith Explorer) will make the most precise measurements of the Yarkovsky effect to date by visiting a PHA called "1999 RQ36" or just "RQ36."
"For such a large object, it has one of the highest known probabilities of impacting Earth, a 1 in 2,400 chance late in the 22nd century, according to calculations by Steve Chesley, an astronomer at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory," said Beshore. RQ36 is about 457 meters (500 yards) across.
The best measurements of the Yarkovsky effect are made when an asteroid's position is precisely known. "If an asteroid comes very close, we can get radar observations on it," says Beshore. "With radar measurements, we get very good data on its range and therefore can constrain one aspect of its orbit very well. If we can get that measurement a couple of times (or more) over a few years, it helps us understand its orbital behavior and we can start to make an estimate of the Yarkovsky effect. We estimate the position of the asteroid and what its orbit must be like by using Newtonian and Relativistic physics. If we see a deviation from the estimated position, then it must be due to the sum of all these other small forces, and the greatest of these we believe to be the Yarkovsky effect."
Measurements like these enabled the team to estimate the very small force of the Yarkovsky effect on RQ36 -- about equal to the weight felt when holding three grapes, according to Beshore. "Although very small, this force is constant and adds up over time to significantly change the asteroid's orbit," adds Beshore.
Scheduled for launch in 2016, OSIRIS-REx will arrive at RQ36 in 2018 and orbit the asteroid until 2021. By communicating continuously with a spacecraft in orbit around RQ36, the team will get a much better idea of the asteroid's orbit.
"We expect OSIRIS-REx will enable us to make an estimate of the Yarkovsky force on RQ36 at least twice as precise as what's available now," says Jason Dworkin, OSIRIS-REx project scientist at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md.
The team will use what it learns about the Yarkovsky effect on RQ36 to help estimate the effects on other asteroids. "What we want to be able to do is create a model that says okay if you give me an asteroid of this size, made of this composition, with this kind of topography, I can estimate for you what the Yarkovsky effect will be," says Beshore. "So now I can probably come up with a better notion of what to expect from other asteroids that I don't have the good fortune to have a spacecraft around."
Given that OSIRIS-REx lets us better model the Yarkovsky effect, and we discover an asteroid that might hit us someday, what if anything can be done about it?
"There are several mitigation strategies," says Beshore. "We could explode a small nuclear device close above the surface on one side of the asteroid. This could be very effective -- it would vaporize the surface layer, which would then fly off at very high speed, causing a rocket thrust that would shove everything over by a few centimeters per second. This might be plenty to deflect the asteroid. Other strategies include kinetic impactors, where you strike an asteroid very hard with a heavy projectile moving at high speed. In 2005, NASA's Deep Impact mission hit comet Tempel 1 with a 370-kilogram (over 815-pound) copper slug at about five kilometers per second (over 11,000 miles per hour), not nearly enough to significantly alter the orbit of the five-kilometer-sized body, but a proof of the technology for this kind of mission. Another idea is to use a gravity tractor -- station a spacecraft precisely enough near the asteroid which would gradually deflect it with only its gravitational pull."
The key to all these strategies is to discover the asteroid well in advance of its impact date and attempt to deflect it early, according to Beshore. "If you're trying to deflect an arrow, you wouldn't need to apply much force to the arrow to make it widely miss the target if you could deflect it as it left the bow," says Beshore. "On the other hand, if you had to deflect it right before it hit the target, you'd need to push on it a whole lot more to get it out of the way."
One of the first things that would be done if an asteroid appeared to be on a collision course with Earth is to send a probe to the asteroid that might look very much like OSIRIS-REx, according to Beshore. "You want to characterize it first to choose the correct deflection strategy," says Beshore. "For example, we know the density of RQ36 is about 1 gram per cubic centimeter, over two times less than solid rock. This means it is probably a rubble pile -- a collection of boulders, rocks, and dust loosely held together by gravity. Some deflection strategies might be ineffective with this kind of asteroid."
OSIRIS-REx will determine if RQ36 is actually a rubble pile by orbiting it and revealing the subtle effects on the orbit from the gravity of any large and dense lumps within the asteroid. A probe like OSIRIS-REx could map the internal structure of an asteroid this way, providing valuable information on where to target the deflection mechanism.
OSIRIS-REx will also determine the composition of RQ36 using remote measurements from both visible light and infrared spectrometers, and by collecting a sample of material from the asteroid's surface and returning it to Earth for study. Since the Yarkovsky effect may vary depending on the type of material and its distribution, a probe with OSIRIS-REx's capability to map the surface composition will enable a more precise estimate of the Yarkovsky effect on the asteroid's orbit.
The mission will also provide critical experience navigating around asteroids. "We don't have a lot of experience doing precise maneuvers near one of these objects with very small gravity," says Beshore. "It's not easy to stay in orbit around it -- this asteroid's gravitational pull is so weak, the push from sunlight on our spacecraft's solar panels will be roughly similar to the amount of force from the gravity of RQ36 itself. We have to factor in a lot of these forces to navigate and operate around an asteroid. With OSIRIS-REx, we'll generate a set of techniques and technologies for any mission that would go to an asteroid to characterize it in advance of a mitigation mission."
The OSIRIS-REx mission is led by Principal Investigator Dante Lauretta of the University of Arizona, supported by a science team of Co-Investigators from multiple institutions, with project management at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Md., and development partnership with Lockheed Martin Space Systems, Littleton, Colo. International contributions are provided by the Canadian Space Agency. The OSIRIS-REx mission was selected under the NASA New Frontiers program, managed by NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center, Huntsville, Ala., and funded by NASA's Science Mission Directorate, NASA Headquarters, Washington.
More information about OSIRIS-REx can be found at: http://osiris-rex.lpl.arizona.edu/
Share this story on Facebook, Twitter, and Google:
Other social bookmarking and sharing tools:
Story Source:
The above story is reprinted from materials provided by NASA.
Note: Materials may be edited for content and length. For further information, please contact the source cited above.
Note: If no author is given, the source is cited instead.
Disclaimer: Views expressed in this article do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.
This entry passed through the Full-Text RSS service — if this is your content and you're reading it on someone else's site, please read the FAQ at fivefilters.org/content-only/faq.php#publishers. Five Filters recommends: Eyes Like Blank Discs - The Guardian's Steven Poole On George Orwell's Politics And The English Language.
You are receiving this email because you subscribed to this feed at http://blogtrottr.com
If you no longer wish to receive these emails, you can unsubscribe here:
http://blogtrottr.com/unsubscribe/cz0/tSbHWJ
订阅:
博文评论 (Atom)
博客归档
-
▼
2013
(16909)
-
▼
二月
(1359)
- ScienceDaily: Latest Science News: 'Crazy-busy' Ca...
- ScienceDaily: Latest Science News: Metal ions regu...
- 互联网新闻-新浪科技: JG Capital维持优酷增持评级 目标股价22美元
- 互联网新闻-新浪科技: Facebook发力Exchange实时竞价广告挑战谷歌
- 互联网新闻-新浪科技: 京东回应阿芙欠款事件 称结款延迟源于发票错误
- 科技要闻-新浪科技: 京东回应阿芙欠款事件 称结款延迟源于发票错误
- 焦点新闻-新浪科技: 巴诺第三财季意外亏损 Nook业务营收锐减
- 焦点新闻-新浪科技: Facebook发力Exchange实时竞价广告挑战谷歌
- 焦点新闻-新浪科技: 黑莓高管称正考虑推出新平板电脑
- ScienceDaily: Latest Science News: Novel wireless ...
- ScienceDaily: Latest Science News: After the human...
- ScienceDaily: Latest Science News: Fusion as an en...
- 科技要闻-新浪科技: 巴诺第三财季意外亏损 Nook业务营收锐减
- ScienceDaily: Latest Science News: Atoms with quan...
- ScienceDaily: Latest Science News: Three overstret...
- ScienceDaily: Latest Science News: River regulatio...
- Confirm your unsubscription from '焦点新闻-新浪科技'
- 互联网新闻-新浪科技: ICANN副总裁李晓东:北京将设立首个代表处
- Solidot: 寻找史前裸女艺术品的意义
- Solidot: Ada Initiative阻止关于性的演讲引发争议
- 科技要闻-新浪科技: ICANN副总裁李晓东:北京将设立首个代表处
- 焦点新闻-新浪科技: ICANN副总裁李晓东:北京将设立首个代表处
- 互联网新闻-新浪科技: 周鸿t与《每经》争论的技术性解读
- 网易科技频道IT业界新闻: 格力集团总裁周少强被免职 被处党内警告处分
- 焦点新闻-新浪科技: 周鸿t与《每经》争论的技术性解读
- 互联网新闻-新浪科技: 腾讯在印尼成立合资公司推广微信
- Solidot: 索尼的新智能手机和平板可以在水下工作
- Solidot: 华为怀疑Firefox OS是否能取得成功
- 科技要闻-新浪科技: 腾讯在印尼成立合资公司推广微信
- 焦点新闻-新浪科技: 腾讯在印尼成立合资公司推广微信
- 互联网新闻-新浪科技: Facebook黏性滑坡探因:与用户生活相关性下降
- Solidot: 天文学家首次直接测量黑洞转速
- Solidot: Ubuntu开发者峰会将在线举行,每年四次
- 科技要闻-新浪科技: ThinkPad推首款Chromebook 针对学生市场
- 科技要闻-新浪科技: 中芯国际商务长季克非辞职转任公司顾问
- 网易科技频道IT业界新闻: 华硕今年加强西班牙和葡萄牙平板市场布局
- 焦点新闻-新浪科技: 索尼证实12亿美元出售东京办公大楼
- 焦点新闻-新浪科技: Facebook黏性滑坡探因:与用户生活相关性下降
- 焦点新闻-新浪科技: 中芯国际商务长季克非辞职转任公司顾问
- Solidot: Firefox OS的付费Web应用如何工作?
- 互联网新闻-新浪科技: Pandora限制移动音乐收听时间应对成本上涨
- 互联网新闻-新浪科技: 青芒果旅行网完成A轮融资
- 科技要闻-新浪科技: 电商纷纷变阵攻城略地:调整“雷同”各取所需
- 科技要闻-新浪科技: 青芒果旅行网完成A轮融资
- 手机资讯-新浪科技: 诺基亚豪言 WP会成为世界第一大系统
- 手机资讯-新浪科技: 移动4G版HTC One摄像头参数有变
- 网易科技频道IT业界新闻: 苹果前CEO:苹果现处于创新间歇期
- 焦点新闻-新浪科技: 英特尔进军低端Android平板市场挑战ARM
- 焦点新闻-新浪科技: 三星加强Android安全性:企业市场挑战黑莓
- 焦点新闻-新浪科技: 青芒果旅行网完成A轮融资
- 互联网新闻-新浪科技: 分析称Twitter估值100亿美元并不虚高
- 焦点新闻-新浪科技: 万得城确认3月退出中国市场
- 焦点新闻-新浪科技: 分析称Twitter估值100亿美元并不虚高
- ScienceDaily: Latest Science News: Faster, more ef...
- ScienceDaily: Latest Science News: New fabrication...
- ScienceDaily: Latest Science News: Discovery on an...
- 网易数码频道:相机资讯: 索尼推出A58单电/NEX-3N微单及4款新镜头
- Confirm your unsubscription from '焦点新闻-新浪科技'
- Confirm your unsubscription from '焦点新闻-新浪科技'
- Confirm your unsubscription from '焦点新闻-新浪科技'
- Confirm your unsubscription from '焦点新闻-新浪科技'
- 焦点新闻-新浪科技: 诺基亚的救赎:从燃烧平台到管理瘦身
- 网易科技频道IT业界新闻: 智能电视国内激活率仅3成
- Solidot: Stuxnet失落的一环被发现
- 焦点新闻-新浪科技: 苏泊尔发布2012年度业绩:净利润同比降2%
- ScienceDaily: Latest Science News: ScienceDaily: L...
- 互联网新闻-新浪科技: 即刻搜索高管调整:刘骏出局 邓亚萍面临困境
- 互联网新闻-新浪科技: 三星发布电子票据管理工具Wallet 挑战苹果
- Solidot: 优秀的R语言免费图书
- 科技要闻-新浪科技: 中芯国际CFO称公司今年继续保持盈利
- 焦点新闻-新浪科技: 即刻搜索高管调整:刘骏出局 邓亚萍或被架空
- 焦点新闻-新浪科技: 苏宁发布2012年度业绩:净利较2011年降44%
- 焦点新闻-新浪科技: 三星发布电子票据管理工具Wallet 挑战苹果
- 互联网新闻-新浪科技: 张朝阳:加大投入搜狐视频 18个月实现盈利
- 互联网新闻-新浪科技: 高德软件第四季度净利870万美元 同比增23%
- Solidot: 宜家肉丸风波,马肉不要紧但不能是中国生产
- Solidot: 微软发布开源云端C++SDK
- 科技要闻-新浪科技: 张朝阳:加大投入搜狐视频 18个月实现盈利
- 焦点新闻-新浪科技: 张朝阳:继续投入搜狐视频 18个月实现盈利
- 焦点新闻-新浪科技: 快讯:高德第四季度净利870万美元 同比增23%
- Solidot: CDN和托管商宣布支持动态内容压缩协议Railgun
- Solidot: 雅虎废除在家工作政策,有利于创新?
- 科技要闻-新浪科技: 索尼发布NEX-3N、A58及四款镜头新品
- 科技要闻-新浪科技: 戴尔复兴寄望私有化:转型进行时
- 科技要闻-新浪科技: 中国电子商会:智能电视平均激活率不到3成
- 焦点新闻-新浪科技: 戴尔复兴寄望私有化:转型进行时
- 焦点新闻-新浪科技: 中国电子商会:智能电视平均激活率不到3成
- 焦点新闻-新浪科技: 欧洲FTTH现状:俄罗斯异军突起 法国奋起直追
- 网易科技频道IT业界新闻: 报告称苹果应向IBM学习多分红 避免微软错误
- 互联网新闻-新浪科技: 互联网公司“下乡” :多种渠道宣传
- 互联网新闻-新浪科技: 太平洋皇冠证券维持巨人“与板块持平”评级
- Solidot: 未来的飞行员不需要弹射座椅
- Solidot: Google把QuickOffice移植到Chrome OS和Chrome浏览器
- 科技要闻-新浪科技: 互联网公司“下乡” :多种渠道宣传
- 科技要闻-新浪科技: 太平洋皇冠证券维持巨人“与板块持平”评级
- 焦点新闻-新浪科技: 太平洋皇冠证券维持巨人“与板块持平”评级
- 焦点新闻-新浪科技: 互联网公司“下乡” :多种渠道宣传
- 焦点新闻-新浪科技: 2013年度全球移动大奖揭晓 三星成最大赢家
- 网易科技频道IT业界新闻: Adobe推出手机版Photoshop Touch
- 网易数码频道:电脑硬件资讯: 支持系统休眠 华芸推出4款网络储存服务器
-
▼
二月
(1359)
没有评论:
发表评论