On
February 15, 2013, an asteroid will come close enough to Earth to
knock satellites out of orbit
7
January, 2013
Near
Earth Asteroid (NEA) 2012 DA14 has its annual flyby of the earth on
February 15, 2013. Its projected orbit according to NASA
will bring it well within the orbits of geosynchronous satellites
currently orbiting our planet.
NASA
has indicated that there is no danger of this asteroid impacting our
planet, however they have not ruled out our gravity changing the
asteroids orbital pattern.
NEA
2012 DA 14 was discovered on February 23, 2012 by the Observatorio
Astronómico de Mallorca (OAM),
near the Spanish city of La Sagra.
According
to NASA’s
Near Earth Object Program, NEO,
the asteroid will pass the earth at a distance of 21,000 miles,
putting the asteroid’s trajectory in between the earth and the
satellites orbiting our planet.
Geosynchronous
satellites orbiting our planet orbit at a distance of roughly 26,200
miles above the earth. Geostationary orbiting objects orbit at a
distance of roughly 22,236 miles above the Earth’s equator.
These
objects are considered to be in High
Earth Orbit (HEO).
Any
object in space considered to be in a Low
Earth Orbit (LEO)
is approximately 1250 miles above the equator.
The
term Medium
Earth Orbit (MEO)
refers to an orbiting object approximately 12,500 miles above the
Earth’s equator, in between objects in an LEO and a HEO,
geosynchronous orbit.
With Near Earth Asteroid 2012 DA 14′s flyby falling somewhere in between geosynchronous satellite orbit, and objects orbiting in a Medium Earth Orbit pattern, the potential for this NEO impacting other objects orbiting our planet appears to be almost guaranteed.
Could
one of these objects be impacted by the asteroid and then be
propelled back into our atmosphere?
The
chance of this happening is low, and NASA has not indicated if this
potential happenstance will occur.
Asteroid
2012 DA 14
has an estimated diameter of about 45 meters, and a mass of roughly
130,000 metric tons, making it a medium-sized asteroid.
If
Asteroid DA 14 were to impact the Earth, it would do so with the
energy of 2.4 Megatons.
Additionally
NASA estimates the closest it can get to the earth will be 17,000
miles above the equator.
NASA
continually tracks these asteroids, through their Near
Earth Object Program (NEO)
in association with the Jet
Propulsion Laboratory (JPL).
NASA’s
Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer program (WISE)
searches the skies of our solar system making observations in an
effort to assess Potentially
Hazardous Asteroids (PHA)
orbiting close to our planet.
Potentially
hazardous asteroids are a smaller subset of the larger group called
the Near Earth Asteroids (NEA) that have close orbits to the Earth’s
and are big enough to survive passing through our atmosphere and
causing damage of great proportions.
“The
NEOWISE analysis shows us we’ve made a good start at finding those
objects that truly represent an impact hazard to earth,” said
Lindley Johnson, program executive for the Near
Earth Object Observation Program at NASA.
“But we’ve many more to find, and it will take a concerted effort
during the next couple of decades to find all of them that could do
serious damage or being mission destination in the future.”
“NASA’s
NEOWISE project, which wasn’t originally planned as part of WISE,
has turned out to be a huge bonus,” said Amy Mainzer, NEOWISE
principal investigator, at NASA’s
Jet Propulsion Laboratory
in Pasadena California. “Everything we can learn about these
projects helps us understand their origins and fate. Our team was
surprised to find the over abundance of low inclination PHA’s.
Because they will tend to make more close approaches to earth, these
targets can provide the best opportunities for the next generation of
human and robotic exploration.”
Pres.
Obama has called for NASA to access an asteroid in orbit for the
purposes of exploring ways to divert its orbit away from the earth in
the event of a potential impact.
A
new project, initiated by scientists at California’s
Institute for Space Studies,
would put an asteroid into orbit around the Earth’s moon, giving us
the ability to study it from a closer distance then the asteroids
standard orbit.
The
majority of asteroids orbiting in our solar system do so in the main
asteroid belt, between the planets Mars and Jupiter.
'Doomsday'
asteroid Apophis more massive than first thought
Astronomers
following the so-called doomsday asteroid Apophis, which will be
whizzing past Earth on Thursday morning, have found the rock is much
larger than had previously been assumed. Since the asteroid could hit
Earth in 2036, that's a problem.
9
January, 2013
The
asteroid, named after an Egyptian god of death, had been thought to
be around 885 feet (270 meters) wide, plus or minus a couple of
hundred feet (60 meters). But as Apophis approached last weekend,
astronomers at the Herschel Space Observatory took new observations
and have concluded that astronomers have seriously underestimated
both its size and its mass.
"The
20 per cent increase in diameter, from 270 to 325m, translates into
a 75 per cent increase in our estimates of the asteroid's volume or
mass," saidThomas
Müller of the Max Planck Institute for Extraterrestrial Physics in
Garching, Germany.
"These
numbers are first estimates based on the Herschel measurements alone,
and other ongoing ground-based campaigns might produce additional
pieces of information which will allow us to improve our results."
In
addition, the asteroid has a much different reflectivity, or albedo,
than previously thought; 0.23 rather than the previous estimates of
0.33. This changes astronomer's calculations of the Yarkovsky effect,
or how the Sun's heating and cooling influence will alter the
asteroid's progress in orbit.
Apophis
caused alarm on Christmas Eve 2004 after a
report that
it had a 2.7 per cent chance of hitting Earth in 2029, and even if it
missed, the encounter could set it up for another strike in 2036. The
asteroid topped the Torino Scale of risk, briefly reaching level four
out of 10 – where zero is no threat and 10 is WE'RE DOOMED!)
After checking
the data and
weeding out the false reports, Apophis was downgraded to
a level one threat and is currently expected to whizz past on Friday,
April 13, 2029 at a distance of about 36,000 kilometers, just inside
the orbit of our geostationary satellites. But there's a kicker.
If
the asteroid passes through a gravitational zone, it will perturb its
progress just enough to make sure that it will most likely hit the
Earth on April 13, 2036. According to Neil deGrasse Tyson, geek icon
and director of the Hayden Planetarium, if it passes through the
center of the gravitational "keyhole" it'll hit the Pacific
off Santa Monica, California and "sandblast the Western
seaboard" with the resulting wave of tsunamis.
The
asteroid is making a relatively close appearance past Earth on
Thursday, coming within nine million miles of us at 1am UTC (5pm
Wednesday PST) and it's being shown live on the Virtual
Telescope Project.
NASA and other space agencies are watching it closely to check on the
current state of play with the asteroid's orbit as it enters and
leaves Earth's orbit.
The
odds of a 2036 impact are still tiny – an estimated 1 in 250,000 –
but human ingenuity being what it is, there are already fertile minds
working on a plan to deflect the asteroid. A recent Australian scheme
called for paintballs
to be fired at Apophis to
increase the Yarkovsky effect and swing it out of harm's way,
and solar
sails have been mooted.
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