Wednesday, 13 October 2010

Defending The Earth Against Incoming Asteroids Using Paintballs

Defending The Earth Against Incoming Asteroids Using Paintballs
An MIT graduate student proposes covering Earth bound asteroids with paint using paint pellets and paint balls to deflect its trajectory from hitting our planet.

The Earth has always been in danger of being hit by large space objects such as comets and asteroids. The extinction of the dinosaurs 65 million years ago, is said to have been caused by an asteroid ten to fifteen kilometers wide hitting the Earth.

According to Nick Bostrom who did a study on human extinction scenarios and its related hazards, every 500,000 years, an asteroid 1km in diameter strikes the earth and a 5km asteroid every ten million years. To get an idea on how powerful asteroids of this size are, a five to ten meter asteroid packs as much power as an atomic bomb.

APOPHIS


Asteroid 2004 MN4 known as Apophis has a diameter of 270 meters and weighs around 27 gigatons. One gigaton is one billion tons (1x109). According to its present trajectory, Apophis will have a close call with the Earth on Friday, 13 April 2029.

The asteroid will be so close that it will be passing below the communications satellites orbiting the Earth. Apophis will fly past the Earth just 18,600 miles above it. Earth satellites orbit at 22,300 miles.

Although it will not hit the Earth at the time, there is a slim chance of hitting the Earth seven years later. It all depends on its initial encounter with the Earth in 2029. If Apophis passes through a region of space above the Earth called the Keyhole, it will directly collide with the Earth on 13 April 2036. The Keyhole is around 600 miles wide and scientists cannot accurately predict if Apophis will pass through it or not. There is a 1 in a million chance that the asteroid will pass thru the keyhole. (Watch Neil DeGrasse Tyson's explanation below for a clearer picture.)

MOVE AN ASTEROID 2012


Apophis has been a growing concern with scientists. They have been thinking of ways to try and avert the disaster this early in time. China's Tsinghua University proposed launching a solar sail powered spacecraft that will move the asteroid away from the keyhole. Some propose landing a probe that will land on the asteroid and push it away using an ion engine. The European Space Agency is looking at launching a projectile or spacecraft to collide with it, hopefully changing its' direction.

Video: Neil DeGrasse Tyson discusses Apophis and the destruction it can bring

In line with this, the United Nations through its Space Generation Advisory Council, launched a competition to come up with original ideas relating to Earth-threatening Near Earth Objects (NEOs). The competition named "Move An Asteroid 2012" focuses on three areas:

* The safe deflection of an Earth-bound NEO
* The detection of NEOs
* A global impact warning system

Sung Wook Paek, a graduate student in MIT's Department of Aeronautics and Astronautics won the competition with his novel and original idea; paint the asteroid white.

PAINTED


According to Paek, two rounds of pellets filled with paint powder will be shot at the asteroid. Around five tons of paint would be needed to cover the front and back of the asteroid. The paint will increase the asteroid's reflectivity or albedo by more than twice its usual. The initial force from the pellets would bump an asteroid off course; over time, the sun's photons would deflect the asteroid even more.

Video: Deflecting An Asteroid With Paintballs

As the pellets hit the asteroid's surface, they would burst apart, splattering the space rock with a fine, five-micrometer-layer of paint. The effect is not instantaneous. It will take around 20 years before the full effect of solar radiation pressure to kick in and successfully pull the asteroid off its trajectory.

Lindley Johnson, program manager for NASA's Near Earth Objects Observation Program, says, "It is very important that we develop and test a few deflection techniques sufficiently so that we know we have a viable 'toolbox' of deflection capabilities to implement when we inevitably discover an asteroid on an impact trajectory,"

William Ailor, principal engineer for Aerospace Corp. in El Segundo, Calif., adds that the potential for an asteroid collision is a long-term challenge for scientists and engineers.

"These types of analyses are really timely because this is a problem we'll have basically forever," Ailor says. "It's nice that we're getting young people thinking about it in detail, and I really applaud that."

RELATED LINKS


Paintballs may deflect an incoming asteroid

Move An Asteroid 2012


Existential Risks

Defending The Earth From Asteroids


JPL Near-Earth Object Program - Nasa

Study Shows Proof That Moon Was Formed From Early Earth Collision With Planetary Body

Rock Layers Show Evidence of Heavy Asteroid Impacts During the Archeon Era 3.8 Billion Years Ago

NASA Spacecraft New Horizons May Be In Peril As It Nears Pluto

MIT News: Asteroid Vesta Once Had Dynamo That Generated Magnetic Field Like The Earth

Japan Space Agency JAXA To Launch Spacecraft Hayabusa 2 To Rendezvous With Asteroid

NASA Debunks End of World by Supernova Scenario


A Small Planet Hidden in the Asteroid Belt?

Meteorites From Asteroid Vesta May Give Clues To Origin of the Solar System



Credit: lights-in-sky.blogspot.com

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