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    Proposed Missions Could Deflect Space Rocks Like Asteroid Apophis

    While scientists keep a close watch on the myriad space rocks near Earth, they don’t yet have a solid plan on what to do if one appears headed on a collision course toward our planet.

    Two new studies propose potential spacecraft missions that would collide with asteroids in an attempt to deflect them away from our planet. Such missions, some researchers say, may be among our best hopes to ward off asteroids that may pose a threat to Earth.

    One concept from researchers in China involves deflecting an asteroid with a spacecraft propelled by solar sails, giant mirrors that fly through space via the force of sunlight reflecting off them. A possible target is the asteroid known as Apophis, named after the Egyptian god of darkness because of fears that it might crash into Earth.

    The researchers noted that giving Apophis a tiny shove at a key moment in 2029 would help ensure that it would not approach Earth in 2036, the year that it is forecasted to come near. The scientists calculated that a solar sail could hurl a spacecraft fast enough at Apophis to potentially knock it off course. [Photos: Asteroids in Deep Space]

    "The impact velocity can be as high as 100 kilometers per second (223,700 mph), which is much higher than the impact velocity of a regular spacecraft, which is about 30 kilometers per second (67,100 mph)," study lead author Shengping Gong at Tsinghua University in Beijing told SPACE.com.

    Europe's asteroid smasher

    Another potential plan, a European Space Agency mission called Don Quijote, would also seek to crash a spacecraft into an asteroid in an attempt to deflect it.

    The mission would involve two probes. One would smash into its target asteroid at more than 30,000 mph (48,000 kph), while the other would orbit the asteroid six months beforehand to observe its behavior before and after impact.

    However, Don Quijote or any other mission aiming to slam into an asteroidsto deflect it would need to analyze such collisions in greater detail than before thought, according to scientists at the Open University in England and their colleagues. [Video: Asteroid Collision Watch]

    Instead of measuring only an asteroid's orbit before and after impact, researchers found that its diameter, reflectivity and surface roughness would also have a large effect on how it would react to a collision. As such, these details need to monitored closely as well, significantly altering such missions.

    In addition to radio transmitters to help pin down an asteroid's orbit, these spacecraft would need to carry sophisticated imaging arrays, and possibly seismic sensors on the space rock to see if it would break apart upon impact.

    "In order for the mission to succeed, you have to characterize the physical properties to distinguish effects from the deflection and effects from other non-gravitational perturbations," study lead author Stephen Wolters, an astronomer now at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif., told SPACE.com.

    Picking an asteroid target

    The researchers do note that the asteroids they used in their calculations are not immediate threats.

    The asteroid Apophis is expected to fly harmlessly by Earth on April 13, 2036, with only a 1-in-233,000 chance of hitting our planet, while neither of the two asteroids studied for the Don Quijote mission, designated 2002AT4 and 1989ML, is close to crossing Earth's orbit.

    Although Apophis was picked for the study only as an example, "the results are universal" and could apply to other asteroids, Gong said.

    "The idea for the mission was not to deflect a dangerous asteroid, but to deflect a safe one a little bit," Wolters said of his team's results. "This is practice so that we are prepared when there is a real danger. At the moment you might need a decade or more to prepare a real deflection mission. By having test missions, you cut down on that time, so you are prepared if you find an asteroid with fewer years until impact."

    Follow SPACE.com contributor Charles Q. Choi on Twitter @cqchoi. Visit SPACE.com for the latest in space science and exploration news on Twitter @Spacedotcom and on Facebook.

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    11 comments

    • uncommon_otaku  •  8 months ago
      Why deflect it & make it a problem for some future generation?

      It would be better science to capture it for study & when the scientists are bored with it, then it can be broken down and exploited for the minerals & rare earths. Nothing has to be wasted, metal alloys refined in orbit can be made into parts for future construction project. Slag can be used for the formation radiation sheilding.
      Or simply capture a space rock big enough to build a habitat on it, and later build thruster generators for navigation with a main thruster/propulsor as primary booster to get somewhere.
      Solar farms built on the surface for energy harvesting, and hollowing it out for naturally sheilded living quaters.

      It would be far more cheaper - than to build an exploration craft from scratch.
    • ENDER  •  8 months ago
      Physics & Friction are the keys to the puzzle here Newton would be the best key.
    • ENDER  •  8 months ago
      anti-matter implosion bomb? h-bomb? a-bomb?
      Or all 3 attached to a 50 ton Kinetic projectile attached to the x-37b made of titanium. however that does not leave room for failure.
    • Hesperos  •  8 months ago
      A series of nuclear explosions to one side of the asteroid would deflect it enough so that most of it would miss the Earth, then subsequent nuclear explosions in any threatening debris fields would reduce the average size of the impactors to the point where friction with the Earth's atmosphere would cause them to burn up before they hit the planet.

      However that's not PC, so we'll all have to die.
      • david 8 months ago
        But the stuff that did hit would be highly radioactive, and the explosion might not reduce the particle size. Might just push them farther apart.
    • Ulfsark  •  8 months ago
      wow, all the nutcases are out, with only one intelligent comment (Ken W). he's right, an impact won't do much since it'll probably absorb the impact and continue on its merry way. Now, perhaps, attaching THRUSTERS to the asteroid that fire off at certain points in its rotation, slowly nudging it away, that might do something.
      • YIKES! 8 months ago
        I thought of that too, putting a ship on the surface, and using the fuel in thrusters would focus more of the energy pushing the asteroid away, than speeding up a spacecraft and losing most of the energy in the resulting collision

        but it would still take a HUGE amount of fuel to accelerate the asteroid this way, by any significant amount, and then you have the issue that all asteroids spin.
      • JerryM 8 months ago
        "huge amount of fuel"? That's an understatement - and then imagine the fuel you would need just to launch the fuel you would be using on the asteroid. Way beyond anything ever tried before.
    • BERN  •  8 months ago
      Space has one ingredient that when we add the other ingredient from a moving rocket, we have ice! and at the designated speeds it can and will deflect an asteroid. There is no reason for an explosion of any kind to contaminate our solar space. By the way, it won't be the first time this was done. Read the records of the ancients.
    • wolfmon  •  8 months ago
      Just like carbon tax , and now asteroid tax anything to get money from people !!!! SOMETHING GOING THOUSANDS OF MILES AND HOUR AND ACT LIKE THEY HAVE A PLAN IS SO FUNNY , THIS IS JUST MORE SMOKE SCREEN FOR SOMETHING ELSE !!!
    • stormtiger  •  8 months ago
      If the repubs have their way, nobody will even attempt to deflect it. Their answer will be to pray....
      • YIKES! 8 months ago
        or hope to hell?
    • YIKES!  •  8 months ago
      crashing a probe into any asteroid that is large enough to do damage to the earth

      will be like a misquito hitting the windshield of a 747.

      the only way to deflect a killer asteroid is with an H bomb, and if you are going to deflect it, put it on a path to fall into the sun.
    • Gazoo  •  8 months ago
      What about comet elenin? Its almost here and would more than likely Grow to an extreme size when it gets to its closest point to our sun, unfortunately that point this time is exactly between the sun and earth in SEP 2011. Yes...a few days to weeks from now. If it does what is expected it will cause a gravitational pull on this planet to where earthquakes and Tsunami's would only be the beginning. Why dont they tell you? So you and everyone else doesnt start looting or going nuts. They want a calm society. But they are the ones who have bunkers from the solar rays. With YOUR tax money. They dont have room for you!!!!
      • Ulfsark 8 months ago
        If it does what its expected, it'll fly harmlessly by. Elenin is what, 50 feet across? it doesn't even HAVE a gravity worth speaking of.
      • Hesperos 8 months ago
        I sense that the poster does not subscribe to the theory of conservation of mass.
      • david 8 months ago
        This what a lack of education will do for you.
    • LAST CALL  •  8 months ago
      better solution. send obama to the asteroid where he can use those lips that never stop flapping and he can pulverize the asteroid into dust with them.
      • YIKES! 8 months ago
        you mean his NlGGER lips?!

        He's half white you know. Maybe he can fly up there with them Dumbo Honky ears his mother gave him!
      • stormtiger 8 months ago
        You two racist pigs need to get brains and then get a life.
      • Ulfsark 8 months ago
        oh sure, the tea baggers aren't racist, WHERE in the world would anyone get THAT idea from??
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