It's like when the "low fuel" idiot light comes on on the dash and you don't go directly to a station because you know you can get another 50 miles before you're really out of gas.
A projection of the impactor's estimated orbit has been released:
http://www.esa.int/Our_Activities/Operations/Russia_asteroid_impact_ESA_update_and_assessment
Its elliptical orbit extended well past the orbit of Mars, suggesting it may have originated in the Main Asteroid Belt. Further proof that it had nothing to do with the asteroid 2012 DA14, which is a Near-Earth Object that orbits between Venus and Earth.
I can appreciate NASA's ability to create precise estimates on the distances and paths of celestial objects, but I'm mystified as to how they could possibly determine mass. Wouldn't they need to be able to penetrate the object with some kind of sensor to determine density and composition, and in multiple places throughout the object (because density and composition vary from spot to spot)? Not having a precise measurement of mass will skew calculations of gravitational effects, which ultimately affects the trajectory.Gary7 said:They may be able to predict if it will bend it in such a way as to bring it closer or further away on the next pass, but I don't believe they can make an accurate estimate on the exact distance it will pass next time.
Yes, they can, within an accuracy of plus or minus about 20,000 kilometers. Heck, NASA's already done calculations for not just the next pass, but the next 25 passes going up to 2137, and you can see for yourself how detailed the calculations are. This is the only pass prior to 2087 when it has any prospect of coming closer to Earth than a hundredth of an AU (1.5 million kilometers).
I can appreciate NASA's ability to create precise estimates on the distances and paths of celestial objects, but I'm mystified as to how they could possibly determine mass. Wouldn't they need to be able to penetrate the object with some kind of sensor to determine density and composition, and in multiple places throughout the object (because density and composition vary from spot to spot)? Not having a precise measurement of mass will skew calculations of gravitational effects, which ultimately affects the trajectory.Gary7 said:They may be able to predict if it will bend it in such a way as to bring it closer or further away on the next pass, but I don't believe they can make an accurate estimate on the exact distance it will pass next time.
Yes, they can, within an accuracy of plus or minus about 20,000 kilometers. Heck, NASA's already done calculations for not just the next pass, but the next 25 passes going up to 2137, and you can see for yourself how detailed the calculations are. This is the only pass prior to 2087 when it has any prospect of coming closer to Earth than a hundredth of an AU (1.5 million kilometers).
The thing is we CAN see half-mile wide asteroids. Granted we're not tracking everything out there. This rock was nothing to be concerned about and NASA would be wasting time looking for stuff like this. We get hit by this kind of thing all of the time this one just happened to happen over a populated area.
This isn't a situation where brute force is the optimal solution. You can't really blow up an asteroid like in the movies -- and if you could, it could actually make things worse, because all that mass would still be on the same collision course for Earth, and it would come down spread out far more widely.
I can appreciate NASA's ability to create precise estimates on the distances and paths of celestial objects, but I'm mystified as to how they could possibly determine mass. Wouldn't they need to be able to penetrate the object with some kind of sensor to determine density and composition, and in multiple places throughout the object (because density and composition vary from spot to spot)? Not having a precise measurement of mass will skew calculations of gravitational effects, which ultimately affects the trajectory.
You missed my point, one of these smaller ones that fly under the radar could strike a bigger one that we think will miss us and change its trajectory slightly to a trajectory that would not be conducive to the survival of the human race.
That is why developing new tech to track these little guys along with better computers to look at the course of all the space rocks in our solar system matters in the coming decades.
Given we don't have anti matter weapons yet or anything that can explode in the 200 gigaton range its a bit speculative as to if the pieces left would be small enough to wipe out life on Earth...
Even if it doesn't work all that well I would rather let the atmosphere work its thing on tens of thousands of pieces of rock instead of dealing with just one half mile wide rock.
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