Posted on 11/20/2002 5:10:21 PM PST by blam
Risk of death by asteroid is less likely
By Roger Highfield, Science Editor
(Filed: 21/11/2002)
The risk of the Earth suffering a devastating asteroid impact is not nearly as likely as feared, scientists say today.
Such events are likely to occur only about every 1,000 years, not every 200 or 300 years as previously thought.
The estimate comes from data provided by US Department of Defence satellites, which scan the Earth for evidence of nuclear explosions. These spy satellites monitor detonations caused by small asteroids - between 3ft and 30ft across.
Dr Peter Brown, of the University of Western Ontario, Canada, and colleagues, say the data suggests that the Earth's upper atmosphere is hit once a year by objects that release energy equivalent to 5,000 tons of TNT.
In the journal Nature, they calculate that impacts equivalent to 10 million tons of TNT are likely to occur once every millennium. The previous estimate relied on ground-based observations.
Asteroid threat reassessed
By Dr David Whitehouse
BBC News Online science editor
Every year a small asteroid explodes in the Earth's atmosphere with an energy equivalent to 5,000 tonnes of TNT, according to new information.
The assessment comes from researchers who have studied about 300 impacts from space observed by US military surveillance satellites.
The scientists now estimate an object of the size that exploded over central Siberia in 1908 causing widespread devastation only strikes the Earth every 1,000 years or so. This is far less frequent than had been thought.
The asteroid impact assessment has been published in the journal Nature.
Military data
Asteroids with diameters smaller than 50-100 metres that collide with the Earth usually do not hit the ground as a single body. Rather, they detonate in the upper atmosphere.
A new analysis of the flashes of light from these exploding asteroids is possible because of data provided by the US Department of Defense from military satellites.
Positioned in geostationary orbit, the satellites have a view of an entire hemisphere of the Earth and, because they are designed to detect light from rockets being launched, they are able to see the light flashes from space impacts as well.
Between February 1994 and September 2002, about 300 impact events were seen. From the intensity and duration of the light flashes, and some basic physics, it was possible to calculate the size of the incoming asteroids.
The researchers led by Dr Peter Brown, of the University of Western Ontario, Canada, estimate that every month an object explodes in the upper atmosphere with an energy equivalent to 300 tonnes of TNT.
'Harmful intruders'
Every 10 years, an object with the energy of 50 kilotonnes impacts the Earth.
An object like the one that struck Tunguska in central Siberia in 1908 hits us, on average, every 1,000 years or so. That object had an energy equivalent to 10 megatonnes of TNT. If such an object were ever to strike an inhabited area, millions of people could be killed.
Recently scientists have expressed concern that upper atmosphere explosions caused by small asteroids could be mistaken for nuclear detonations, especially during times of international tension.
Surveying the latest data, Dr Benny Peiser, of Liverpool John Moores University, UK, told BBC News Online: "This new research reinforces our view that we are constantly bombarded by cosmic debris large enough to be misinterpreted as a nuclear attack.
"The findings are a compelling warning that we need to start scanning the skies for small, but potentially harmful intruders."
And commenting in the journal Nature, Dr Robert Jedicke, of the University of Arizona, US, says the study has "linked the fields of meteor and comet/asteroid planetary astronomy in a manner which shows that they are not merely distant cousins."
corresponding coastline map:
The "+" marks the reported impact point at 61.4N, 44.4W. Latitude and longitude lines are sketched at 2 degree intervals, based on the reported GOES earth-navigation. At this time, the navigated map's coastlines fall 3 pixels south and one pixel west of the observed coastlines, within the GOES earth-navigation error tolerances of 4 visible pixels.
Unfortunately, Greenland is too dark in December to provide visible images during the other GOES-8 observation times, such as 1145 and 1745 UTC.
GIF animation
coastline map ("+" marks impact point)
I don't think they will anyway - I don't know about your policy, but mine specifically disclaims any liability for damages due to "orbital or other space objects". Bastards.
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