A giant space rock wiped out the dinosaurs 65 million years ago. Could Earth be hit again?
Source: The Week
What’s out there?
So far, NASA has classified
more than 21,000 asteroids and more than 100 comets as near-Earth
objects. Of that group, about 2,000 are considered “potentially
hazardous,” meaning they have orbits within 4.5 million miles of Earth’s
and are big enough to cause massive devastation on impact. Congress has
directed NASA to find and track at least 90 percent of the objects
measuring 459 feet in diameter or larger and that pass within 30 million
miles of Earth’s orbit. So far, nothing has been discovered that poses a
threat within the next 100 years. But scientists have identified only
an estimated 40 percent of near-Earth objects. Researchers were stunned
in July when a previously undetected “city killer” asteroid that was up
to 427 feet wide came within 45,000 miles of Earth — less than one-fifth
the distance to the moon. If the asteroid had struck the Earth, “it
would have gone off like a very large nuclear weapon,” said Michael
Brown, an observational astronomer at Australia’s Monash University.
Why did scientists miss it?
Asteroids are tough
to spot in the void of space. Astronomers continually take pictures of
the sky, using computers to look for movement across the background of
stars. Smaller asteroids shine less brightly and need to come relatively
close to Earth at some point in their orbits to be detected by
ground-based telescopes. The city killer that zipped by this summer had
an “eccentric orbit” that made it detectable for only brief periods of
time. It also came close to the nearly full moon, the brightness of
which made it tougher to spot. But don’t panic: Your odds of being
killed by an asteroid are exceedingly slim at roughly 1 in 250,000.
You’re far more likely to die in an airplane crash (1 in 30,000) or an
earthquake (1 in 130,000).
How often is Earth hit?
The planet is under
constant bombardment. About 100 tons of dust and gravel-size particles
enter the planet’s atmosphere every day, burning up from friction as
they crash through air molecules at more than 45,000 mph. These tiny
collisions generate so much heat that they are visible as shooting
stars. Space rocks smaller than about 80 feet can create spectacular
fireballs and generally cause little or no damage. But not always. In
2013, an undetected 66-foot asteroid exploded 14 miles above
Chelyabinsk, Russia, releasing 20 to 30 times more energy than the
nuclear bomb dropped on Hiroshima. The resulting shock wave shattered
windows throughout the city, injuring more than 1,100 people. Scientists
expect collisions like the one at Chelyabinsk about once every 60
years.
What about bigger asteroids?
In 1908, a space
rock estimated to be 160 to 260 feet wide exploded above an uninhabited
part of Siberia, leveling 80 million trees and leaving hundreds of
blackened reindeer carcasses across an area twice the size of Los
Angeles. If the asteroid had arrived just four hours later, it could
have hit and destroyed St. Petersburg. A rock that big strikes Earth
once or twice every 1,000 years. The asteroid thought to have wiped out
the dinosaurs 65 million years ago was even bigger, measuring 6 to 9
miles in diameter. It smashed into what is now the Gulf of Mexico,
triggering massive tsunamis and sending up toxic plumes of sulfur.
Collisions that devastating happen about once every 100 million years.
Could we stop an asteroid from hitting?
In
theory. But unlike in the movies, it would be pointless to try to blow
up the approaching rock. As hardy remnants of the formation of our solar
system, asteroids have survived countless collisions in space. Some
scientists think that if you blew apart an asteroid, the gravitational
pull of its core would force the rock back together. By one estimate, it
would take a nuclear weapon 4,000 times more powerful than the biggest
nuke ever created to totally destroy an asteroid double the size of the
one that killed the dinosaurs. A better approach would be to try to
nudge the asteroid off course.
How would that work?
A nuclear explosion about
1,000 feet from the asteroid would probably do the trick. A custom
spacecraft would deliver the payload, but NASA won’t be testing the
concept anytime soon, because deploying nuclear weapons in space is both
risky and banned by international law. Another option is to use a
spacecraft as a battering ram, a method NASA will experiment with in
2021 when it launches a probe against a nonthreatening asteroid. We
could also try to subtly redirect an asteroid using the gravity of a
spaceship flying close by for an extended period of time, a so-called
gravity tractor. Even a tiny nudge could alter an asteroid’s trajectory
by thousands of miles over time. But it would take at least a year to
chart the trajectory of an asteroid to ensure our craft reached its
target. With only a few months’ lead time, the best we could manage when
faced with a “city killer” would be mass evacuations, a scenario NASA
and FEMA already run drills for. “These events are not rare; they
happen,” NASA Administrator Jim Bridenstine told a Planetary Defense
Conference earlier this year. “This is not about movies. This is about
ultimately protecting the only planet we know right now to host life.”
Doomsday scenarios
An impact from an asteroid
that’s more than about a half-mile wide would be a global catastrophe.
Even on the small end, an asteroid of that size would destroy everything
within hundreds of miles of ground zero, triggering massive earthquakes
and fires. The dust and smoke sent into the atmosphere would darken the
skies for months, plunging the Earth into a mini ice age, causing
worldwide crop failures. An asteroid similar in size to the one that
doomed the dinosaurs would probably trigger mass extinctions, blot out
the sun entirely for months, and kill billions of humans. Still, some
scientists think that those who didn’t perish in the initial blast or
die in the subsequent global famine might stand a chance at
long-term survival. University of Colorado geoscientist Brian Toon
estimates that it would take an asteroid 60 miles wide to fully
obliterate the human race. “That,” he says, “would incinerate
everybody.”
Source: The Week
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