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White House Adviser: US Must Prepare for Asteroid
AOL News ^ | Monday, October 25, 2010 | Lee Speigel

Posted on 10/26/2010 7:37:06 PM PDT by SunkenCiv

In separate 10-page letters to the House Committee on Science and Technology and the Senate Committee on Commerce, Science and Transportation, John Holdren, director of the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy, or OSTP, outlines plans for "(A) protecting the United States from a near-Earth object that is expected to collide with Earth; and (B) implementing a deflection campaign, in consultation with international bodies, should one be necessary."

...

While Holdren indicates that no large asteroid or comet presents an immediate hazard to our planet, the fact that devastating impacts have occurred on Earth in the distant past is enough to warrant safety precautions for the future...

Asteroids are rocky bodies found within the inner solar system, originating in an area known as the asteroid belt, located between the planets Mars and Jupiter.

If a large asteroid were to strike Earth, it could cause a global climate change, which many scientists believe is what caused the extinction of the dinosaurs more than 60 million years ago -- not a good prospect for life on Earth in the present day if a similar event occurred.

NASA's Near Earth Object program, or NEO, looks for and monitors asteroids that are at least a kilometer in diameter... After 12 years of cosmic hunting, NASA search teams have determined that 149 NEOs larger than a kilometer in size are in orbits that might pose a problem for Earth, but none is considered an impact threat in the next 100 years...

(Excerpt) Read more at aolnews.com ...


TOPICS: Astronomy; Science
KEYWORDS: asteroid; asteroids; catastrophism; johnholdren; unitednations
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To: The Theophilus

According to Greco-Roman literature at least the world was somehow or other protected from such problems in recent prehistoric time. We no longer are, and just getting rid of I-slam and inbreeding won’t fix the problem. We’re capable of solving this one and we need to.


61 posted on 10/26/2010 9:32:44 PM PDT by wendy1946
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To: SunkenCiv

You can be certain they’re looking for an excuse to create a new tax!


62 posted on 10/26/2010 9:53:33 PM PDT by vigilante2 (Reelect Nobody)
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To: balch3
this is the most non partisan of issues and will be a long term threat. I hope whomever occupies the WH going forward will be working on this.

I see two hugely partisan aspects of this.

The first one is consulting international bodies. If we stop to do this, we will never accomplish the task, and our children will perish.

The second one is the very concept of deflecting an asteroid. I would vastly prefer an attempt to capture any such asteroid into earth orbit, claim it for the US, be prepared to militarily defend this new territory, and mine it.

A vast source of material which is not at the bottom of either Earth's gravity well or the Moon's would be an enormous advantage in the exploration and colonization of the solar system.

63 posted on 10/26/2010 9:59:22 PM PDT by CurlyDave
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To: truthandlife
Rev. 8:10-11 And the third angel sounded, and there fell a great star from heaven, burning as it were a lamp, and it fell upon the third part of the rivers, and upon the fountains of waters;

And the name of the star is called Wormwood: and the third part of the waters became wormwood; and many men died of the waters, because they were made bitter.

64 posted on 10/26/2010 10:05:03 PM PDT by ScubieNuc
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To: CurlyDave


65 posted on 10/26/2010 10:10:13 PM PDT by BlueDragon (....other than that we aint nothin' just good 'ol boys...)
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To: CurlyDave

interesting idea. I thought asteroids were primarily composed of iron, which is abundant here on earth. What would be the upside of capturing one to mine?


66 posted on 10/26/2010 11:49:07 PM PDT by balch3
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To: I Shall Endure
Nuclear explosions leave readily measurable radioactive by-products. Unless the survivors had only pre-20th century technology, a nuclear explosion would be identified as such.

A sufficiently powerful series of *conventional* EMP devices would place us all in the front row seats of the off-Broadway revival of 1850, which features confusion and stars no radio-isotopic identification technology.


Frowning takes 68 muscles.
Smiling takes 6.
Pulling this trigger takes 2.
I'm lazy.

67 posted on 10/27/2010 8:56:54 AM PDT by The Comedian (Don't run. You'll just die tired.)
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To: vigilante2

How ‘bout this, we call it — “Tax-eroid!”


68 posted on 10/27/2010 7:51:51 PM PDT by SunkenCiv (The 2nd Amendment follows right behind the 1st because some people are hard of hearing.)
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To: BlueDragon
More Moons Around Earth? It's Not So Loony
by Robin Lloyd
October 29 1999
Earth has a second moon, of sorts, and could have many others. Cruithne, the 3-mile-wide (5-km) satellite, takes 770 years to complete a horseshoe-shaped orbit around Earth, and will remain in a suspended state around Earth for at least 5,000 years. Every 385 years, it comes to its closest point to Earth, some 9.3 million miles (15 million kilometers) away. Its next close approach to Earth comes in 2285. "We found new dynamical channels through which free asteroids become temporarily moons of Earth and stay there from a few thousand years to several tens of thousands of years," said Fathi Namouni, one of the researchers, now at Princeton University. Namouni's colleague Apostolos Christou said, "At specific points in its orbit, it reverses its rate of motion with respect to Earth so it will appear to go back and forth." In his view, there are three classes of moons -- large moons in near-circular orbits around a planet, having formed soon after the planet; smaller fragments that are the products of collisions; and outer, irregular moons in odd orbits, or captured asteroids like Cruithne. In the past year, astronomers have reported finding such objects around Uranus.

69 posted on 10/27/2010 7:58:47 PM PDT by SunkenCiv (The 2nd Amendment follows right behind the 1st because some people are hard of hearing.)
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To: truthandlife

:’) Hey, I’m pretty sure we’d all be surprised if one hit in October. If it were about three miles across, our surprise wouldn’t last long. One mile wide (with a little wiggle room for velocity and density) would deliver more energy than all the world’s nukes piled up and set off simultaneously; three miles is circa three times bigger in all three dimensions, hence, 27 times more powerful (again, with a little wiggle room). i.e., kinda serious. But undeniably surprising.


70 posted on 10/27/2010 8:02:23 PM PDT by SunkenCiv (The 2nd Amendment follows right behind the 1st because some people are hard of hearing.)
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To: SunkenCiv
...why, that's just loony, in an irregular, long period & distance sort of way... [8^')
71 posted on 10/27/2010 8:12:48 PM PDT by BlueDragon (....other than that we aint nothin' just good 'ol boys...)
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To: SunkenCiv
"If a large asteroid were to strike Earth, it could cause a global climate change"

This is a first:
Statist Climate change scientist that I believe!

72 posted on 10/28/2010 1:58:47 PM PDT by Steve Van Doorn (*in my best Eric cartman voice* 'I love you guys')
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To: ElayneJ

yeap, they have cried wolf so much people will not believe them when a real problem comes up.


73 posted on 10/28/2010 2:00:11 PM PDT by Steve Van Doorn (*in my best Eric cartman voice* 'I love you guys')
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To: Steve Van Doorn

:’)

It’s happened before, it will happen again. Not the part about believing a statist climate change scientist. :’)


74 posted on 10/28/2010 7:04:17 PM PDT by SunkenCiv (The 2nd Amendment follows right behind the 1st because some people are hard of hearing.)
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To: SunkenCiv

:’)


75 posted on 10/28/2010 7:17:27 PM PDT by Steve Van Doorn (*in my best Eric cartman voice* 'I love you guys')
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To: RayChuang88

Yes but how are you going to gte the nuke/satellite on the asteroid far enough away in time to do its work?

By the time gets within the solar system its to late IMO.


76 posted on 10/28/2010 11:00:04 PM PDT by valkyry1
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