Incoming? $40 million to track asteroids
Alicia Robinson
As if having triplets and serving in a Congress facing the highest
trade deficit in U.S. history weren’t enough to worry about, Costa
Mesa Rep. Dana Rohrabacher also has concerns about objects in outer
space.
He’s long been a proponent of commercial space exploration and
chaired a House subcommittee on space and aeronautics for years.
Hoping to assuage fears about an asteroid hitting our planet,
Rohrabacher in March introduced a bill that would provide NASA with
$40 million during 2006 and 2007 to track and catalog near-Earth
objects.
“We need to make sure that we are surveying not only the huge
objects in space that are coming toward us and that would totally
destroy the Earth, but also those objects that are coming toward us
that would have a catastrophic impact,” Rohrabacher said.
The last time an object crashed down that would have destroyed
cities, had any been there, was in 1908 near the Stony Tunguska River
in Siberia, said Virginia Trimble, a physics and astronomy professor
at UC Irvine.
Those types of events are rare, but smaller space objects pose a
threat that’s hard to gauge, she said.
“Asteroids that are 100 miles across, all of those are known,”
Trimble said. “When you get down to 10 miles across, only some of
those are known, and when you get down to one mile across, the
surveys are very incomplete.”
So not only is there very little data on smaller objects, but
their orbits aren’t always stable. The danger may not be known until
just weeks before an object is heading toward Earth, Trimble said.
While people have gone for thousands of years without knowing
whether anything was flying at them from space, that ignorance is not
bliss to Rohrabacher, who said his bill has gotten a good response
from colleagues so far.
“I think that it is almost criminal not to think of something
simply because it is unlikely,” the congressman said. “This
legislation is aimed at trying to spur people to come up with not
only the proper cataloging but how do we deal with it.”
How to address a giant -- or even mid-sized -- ball of space rock
hurtling toward the planet is a dicey issue among scientists.
You could shoot it with nuclear weapons, but that means the planet
would be hit with a lot of smaller objects rather than one large one,
Trimble said. Another plan is to send something up to the object that
heats up one side of it, creating a plume-like rocket exhaust that
would shift the object’s orbit.
And while the duck-and-cover method won’t work, people can always
run from a smaller incoming object.
“If it’s something that you catch [within] days or weeks because
it’s small, then it’s like having a good earthquake or a good tsunami
warning,” Trimble said. “You tell people to get the hell out of the
way.”
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