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Largest Asteroid in Years Misses Earth - "We never saw it coming"
Jun 21,2002 - 12:15 AM ET | Deborah Zabarenko

Posted on 06/21/2002 5:16:28 AM PDT by Cincinatus' Wife

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - An asteroid the size of a soccer field whizzed by Earth at a distance much nearer than the Moon, the biggest such space rock in decades to get this close, scientists said on Thursday.

Asteroid 2002MN was not detected until Monday, three days after its closest approach on June 14, when it got within 75,000 miles of Earth and was traveling at a speed of some 23,000 miles per hour, astronomers said.

It is now several million miles away, according to Brian Marsden of the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics' Minor Planet Center, which tracks asteroids.

"It's the largest (asteroid) we've seen at that distance in the last several decades," Marsden said in a telephone interview.

The last time any asteroid came this close was in 1994, according to the Near Earth Object Information Center in Britain.

The big rock, with a diameter of roughly 50 yards to 120 yards, would not have caused global catastrophe if it had struck Earth. That would take an asteroid of several miles diameter.

However, if it had hit Earth, it had the potential to cause as much local devastation as a 1908 hit in Tunguska, Siberia, which flattened some 800 square miles of forest.

Asteroid 2002MN was first spotted by the Lincoln Near Earth Asteroid Research program, based in Socorro, New Mexico.

"It's a good thing it missed the Earth, because we never saw it coming," Steve Maran of the American Astronomical Society said in a telephone interview. "The asteroid wasn't discovered until three days after it passed its closest approach to our planet."

LINEAR is part of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration's initiative to find 90 percent of all near-Earth objects, including asteroids, that measure .62 mile or more in diameter by 2008.

An asteroid the size of 2002MN may hit Earth about once every hundred years or so, and the planet may not have seen the last of this one, Marsden said.

"There is a slim chance it could hit in 2061," he said, putting that chance at about one in 100,000.

"At some level, it behooves us to look out for these things," he said.

Asteroid 2002 MN will be observable by some telescopes but it is getting fainter as it moves away, Marsden said.


TOPICS: Front Page News; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: space
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To: Cincinatus' Wife
"75,000 miles"

Someone ain't kidding when they say close. What now? Is Congress going to fund a $37 Billion pork included Counter-Asteroid Program? Create a new department of Outer-Space Defense Agency? or demand from the UN that they rename themselves the United Federation of Planets? Demand hearings on why NASA failed to detect this attempted attack on Earth? Leak intelligence information that we had prior space signals on this asteriod? Revisit the national missile defense program allowing for missiles to be also launched into space? Stand on the Capitol stairs and hum the the sound track to Star Trek?

41 posted on 06/21/2002 7:51:06 AM PDT by PoppingSmoke
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To: PoppingSmoke
Is Congress going to fund a $37 Billion pork included Counter-Asteroid Program? Create a new department of Outer-Space Defense Agency?

That's the Robert Byrd Counter-Asteroid Program based in West Virginia.

42 posted on 06/21/2002 8:01:19 AM PDT by KarlInOhio
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To: Orangedog
I think the biggest concern, if this or one like it were to hit the Earth, is how governments would react to the impact/explosion. For instance, if it would have hit the US, Russia, or China, particularly near a population center. This could very easily be mistaken for a blast from a nuclear weapon. SAC/NORAD would probably be able to figure out that it was a big rock from space, but what about some of the other members of the nuclear club?

Actually, there are dozens of multi-kiloton explosions in our atmosphere every day. Discovery had some neat time-lapse photos. One of the things that much of our detection system is set up for is descriminating between real launches, blasts, and meteor events.

43 posted on 06/21/2002 8:03:05 AM PDT by lepton
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To: KarlInOhio
"That's the Robert Byrd Counter-Asteroid Program based in West Virginia."

No way! My vote goes to the Shelia Jackson Lee Counter-Asteroid Program. Based right next to where our Astronauts planted the Flag on Mars!

44 posted on 06/21/2002 8:08:35 AM PDT by PoppingSmoke
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To: PoppingSmoke
There's no way to stop one unless we see it comming well in advance. More money should be spent on finding them. However, the only hope for the long term survival of our species is to spread ourselves around the solar system. I'd like to see the first colony on Mars be under the American flag, not some Euro-wanker's version of internationalism. But, given the lack of interest in the US space program, we'll never see it.

45 posted on 06/21/2002 8:09:04 AM PDT by clifdweller
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To: clifdweller
"More money should be spent on finding them."

Now use the terrorism model! More funding will be appropriated, right after we get struck by one.

46 posted on 06/21/2002 8:13:23 AM PDT by PoppingSmoke
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To: PoppingSmoke
Now use the terrorism model! More funding will be appropriated, right after we get struck by one.

Don't you know? That's the American way.

47 posted on 06/21/2002 8:18:38 AM PDT by Bernard Marx
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To: Joe Brower
I know. Fortunately, "almost" close only counts in grenades and horseshoes. and nuclear warfare...
48 posted on 06/21/2002 8:19:09 AM PDT by null and void
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To: lepton
One of the things that much of our detection system is set up for is descriminating between real launches, blasts, and meteor events.

Our system could do this, but what about the other nuclear nations? They Western European countries probably can, but there is a lot of left over East German quality radar equipment in the Asian and former Soviet areas. China, Russia, and possibly North Korea, can at the very least take out our West Coast.

49 posted on 06/21/2002 8:19:22 AM PDT by Orangedog
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To: Cincinatus' Wife
Another fine example of our government being on top of things. Oooops.

MM

50 posted on 06/21/2002 8:28:37 AM PDT by MississippiMan
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To: Dan(9698)
If you see another airplane and it does not appear to be moving, you are on a collision course.

Or you're following the other airplane.

51 posted on 06/21/2002 10:15:06 AM PDT by Steve0113
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To: Orangedog
There would be a lack of radiation and , to the best of my knowledge, no EMP, both of which would be detected in the event of a nuke explosion. Even the Chinese could detect that.
52 posted on 06/21/2002 10:26:38 AM PDT by dixierat22
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To: Cincinatus' Wife
Largest Asteroid in Years Misses Earth - "We never saw it coming"

Shame we don't have anything up there to rope these big boys into a safer, much more productive orbit (say out beyond GSO).

53 posted on 06/21/2002 10:35:39 AM PDT by adx
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To: agenda_express
The Hubble Space Telescope is not a poor investment, and asteroid tracking is a specialized mission requiring a completely different set up with a wide field of surveillance, with constant monitoring, as we saw in this incident, from a 360 degree vantage. That will require major instrumentation and a lot of money.
54 posted on 06/21/2002 12:28:23 PM PDT by Paul Ross
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To: Dan(9698)
Any suggestions? Remote Observation platforms up at L-5 and Luna for additional parallax?
55 posted on 06/21/2002 12:31:09 PM PDT by Paul Ross
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To: Orangedog
All the more reason to have an asteroid detection/interception system, plus a National Missile Defense...
56 posted on 06/21/2002 12:32:50 PM PDT by Paul Ross
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To: Orangedog
All the more reason to have an asteroid detection/interception system, plus a National Missile Defense...
57 posted on 06/21/2002 12:32:51 PM PDT by Paul Ross
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To: Cincinatus' Wife
Damn Archnids. Sounds like a job for the Mobile Infantry and Reco's Roughnecks.

Do you want to know MORE?

58 posted on 06/21/2002 12:53:09 PM PDT by Search4Truth
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