Asteroid's sudden flyby shows blind spot in planetary threat detection
Send a link to a friend
[January 30, 2023]
By Joey Roulette
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The discovery of an asteroid the size of a small
shipping truck mere days before it passed Earth on Thursday, albeit one
that posed no threat to humans, highlights a blind spot in our ability
to predict those that could actually cause damage, astronomers say.
NASA for years has prioritized detecting asteroids much bigger and more
existentially threatening than 2023 BU, the small space rock that
streaked by 2,200 miles from the Earth's surface, closer than some
satellites. If bound for Earth, it would have been pulverized in the
atmosphere, with only small fragments possibly reaching land.
But 2023 BU sits on the smaller end of a size group, asteroids 5-to-50
meters in diameter, that also includes those as big as an Olympic
swimming pool. Objects that size are difficult to detect until they
wander much closer to Earth, complicating any efforts to brace for one
that could impact a populated area.
The probability of an Earth impact by a space rock, called a meteor when
it enters the atmosphere, of that size range is fairly low, scaling
according to the asteroid's size: a 5-meter rock is estimated to target
Earth once a year, and a 50-meter rock once every thousand years,
according to NASA.
But with current capabilities, astronomers can't see when such a rock
targets Earth until days prior.
"We don't know where most of the asteroids are that can cause local to
regional devastation," said Terik Daly, a planetary scientist at the
Johns Hopkins Applied Physics Laboratory.
The roughly 20-meter meteor that exploded in 2013 over Chelyabinsk,
Russia is a once-every-100-years event, according to NASA's Jet
Propulsion Laboratory. It created a shockwave that shattered tens of
thousands of windows and caused $33 million in damage, and no one saw it
coming before it entered Earth's atmosphere.
Some astronomers consider relying only on statistical probabilities and
estimates of asteroid populations an unnecessary risk, when improvements
could be made to NASA's ability to detect them.
"How many natural hazards are there that we could actually do something
about and prevent for a billion dollars? There's not many," said Daly,
whose work focuses on defending Earth from hazardous asteroids.
[to top of second column]
|
A man repairs the window of a sports
hall damaged by a shockwave from a meteor in the Urals city of
Chelyabinsk February 16, 2013. REUTERS/Olaf Koens/File Photo
AVOIDING A REALLY BAD DAY
One major upgrade to NASA's detection arsenal will be NEO Surveyor,
a $1.2 billion telescope under development that will launch nearly a
million miles from Earth and surveil a wide field of asteroids. It
promises a significant advantage over today's ground-based
telescopes that are hindered by daytime light and Earth's
atmosphere.
That new telescope will help NASA meet a goal assigned by Congress
in 2005: detect 90% of the total expected amount of asteroids bigger
than 140 meters, or those big enough to destroy anything from a
region to an entire continent.
"With Surveyor, we're really focusing on finding the one asteroid
that could cause a really bad day for a lot of people," said Amy
Mainzer, NEO Surveyor principal investigator. "But we're also tasked
with getting good statistics on the smaller objects, down to about
the size of the Chelyabinsk object."
NASA has fallen years behind on its congressional goal, which was
ordered for completion by 2020. The agency proposed last year to cut
the telescope's 2023 budget by three quarters and a two-year launch
delay to 2028 "to support higher-priority missions" elsewhere in
NASA's science portfolio.
Asteroid detection gained greater importance last year after NASA
slammed a refrigerator-sized spacecraft into an asteroid to test its
ability to knock a potentially hazardous space rock off a collision
course with Earth.
The successful demonstration, called the Double Asteroid Redirection
Test (DART), affirmed for the first time a method of planetary
defense.
"NEO Surveyor is of the utmost importance, especially now that we
know from DART that we really can do something about it," Daly said.
"So by golly, we gotta find these asteroids."
(Reporting by Joey Roulette; Editing by Andrea Ricci)
[© 2023 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content. |