Scientists unveil new detectors in race to save Earth from next asteroid: timing of asteroid spared UK from devastation

February 16, 2013 SPACE - The extraterrestrial double whammy that Earth only partially avoided on Friday has triggered an immediate response from astronomers. Several have announced plans to create state-of-the-art detection systems to give warning of incoming asteroids and meteoroids. These include projects backed by NASA as well as proposals put forward by private space contractors. In each case, scientists want to develop techniques that can pinpoint relatively small but still potentially devastating meteoroids, comets and asteroids that threaten to strike Earth. These would give notice of impact of several days or possibly weeks and allow threatened areas to be evacuated. The announcements of the various plans follow Friday’s meteorite crash that caused devastation in Chelyabinsk, Russia. On the same day, a 150ft-diameter asteroid swept to within 17,000 miles of Earth. The fact that the two events happened together has been dismissed as “a cosmic coincidence” by scientists. Nevertheless, astronomers – many gathered at the American Association for the Advancement of Science annual meeting in Boston this weekend – have been quick to reassure the public that they have plans to provide better warnings of future impacts. “The hundreds of people injured in Russia show it is time to take action and no longer be passive about these events,” said Rick Tumlinson, chairman of the US company Deep Space Industries. His company is preparing to launch a series of small spacecraft later this decade. These are aimed at surveying nearby asteroids to see if they can be mined for metals and ores. However the fleet could also be used to monitor small, difficult-to-detect objects that threaten to strike Earth. Deep Space Industries – which is based in McLean, Virginia – proposes building 10 spacecraft at a cost of $100m (£65m) over the next four years, though it has not indicated who will fund missions. The University of Hawaii has proposed a cheaper, simpler system known as Atlas – Advanced Terrestrial-Impact Last Alert System – to be constructed with the help of a $5m grant from NASA. It will consist of a series of eight telescopes, each fitted with powerful cameras, to be built on Hawaiian islands whose clear air makes accurate observations particularly easy. Astronomer Professor John Tonry, of Hawaii University, said Atlas – which is scheduled to begin operations in 2015 – would have an extremely high sensitivity, which he compared to the detection of a match flame in New York when viewed from San Francisco. He said Atlas would give a one-week warning for a small asteroid – which he called “a city killer” – and three weeks for a larger “county killer.” Tonry added: “That is enough time to evacuate the area, take measures to protect buildings and other infrastructure, and be alert to a tsunami danger generated by ocean impacts.” Astronomers believe they have pinpointed all large asteroids whose orbits bring them close to Earth. To date, none has been found on a collision course with our planet. However, small asteroids only a few dozen meters across are very difficult to spot but massive enough to cause local devastation. Had the time of entry of the Chelyabinsk meteorite into the atmosphere varied by only a few hours; its path would have brought it down over much larger population centers in northern England; hence the pressure from astronomers to develop ways to pinpoint small objects in space. Russia’s Academy of Sciences said the object that struck Chelyabinsk weighed about 10 tonnes. It was probably part of a larger meteorite that had entered the atmosphere at about 30km per second before breaking up. The energy it released was comparable with a small nuclear bomb exploding. More than 4,000 windows were blown out by the blast, including many at schools where pupils were in their classrooms. Video footage has shown images of frightened, screaming children pouring out of schools. A large fragment of the of the meteorite is believed to have crashed into a frozen lake near the town of Chebarkul. However, divers who searched the bottom of the lake reported that they could find no trace of any lumps of meteorite. Russian authorities said the search for the meteorite may have to wait until spring when the snow melts. The last time the Earth was struck by a large extraterrestrial object was in 1908 when a huge blast – the equivalent of a medium-sized atomic bomb – in the Tungaska in Siberia flattened more than 80 million trees. It is thought a comet more than 100m in diameter was responsible for the devastation. –Guardian
About these ads
This entry was posted in Civilizations unraveling, Comets, Dark Ages, Earth Changes, Earth Watch, Fireballs, Meteor or Asteroid, Human behavioral change after disaster, Infrastructure collapse, Prophecies referenced, Seismic tremors, Time - Event Acceleration. Bookmark the permalink.

11 Responses to Scientists unveil new detectors in race to save Earth from next asteroid: timing of asteroid spared UK from devastation

  1. HolyTruthWarrior says:

    Hello Alvin, Thank you for all the updates and your encouragement, using the words of our Heavenly Father. This I find odd…that the news is claiming that this meteorite in Russia, Cuba and smaller ones elsewhere had nothing to do with the asteroid flyby…and they just so happen to be having a meeting of the minds the following weekend of these events…which they just so happen to have all these plans and ideas to detect more incoming meteorites and asteroids and plan accordingly. Also, I was wondering and I feel there is a huge probably, that there this ability that incoming objects, can be drawn and manipulated to be navigated to an area. First we heard of space junk coming in having an idea where it might land. Maybe they were the trial runs while they were in the first stages of this. Maybe they moved on to bigger objects like meteorites. Could HARP or another microwave sonar weapon have this ability now? I wonder just how many governments or other interest groups could have their hands on this kind of technology by now. Perhaps the final frontier of space is where our next WW will be. Anyway, just some thoughts. Thanks again for keeping us awake.

    Blessings of Christ be to you and all who call on His Name with a humble heart.
    HTW

  2. Joseph t. Repas says:

    After the first two”false alarms”that occur when these systems are activated and tens of thousands are evacuated and then told never mind it missed us or landed in a different city these will become nearly obsolete. when will mankind understand that we can not steer the planet away from swarms of cosmic debris nor swat away every large rock that comes a little too close for comfort. God just showed us that we will fail at it by allowing us to focus on 2012DA14 and getting slammed with another rock we never saw coming!

  3. nanoduck says:

    I certainly do not have much faith in NASA to protect us from asteroids. After all, it was an amateur astronomer who first found 2012 DA14, not NASA.

  4. Gem says:

    Is it possible that the objects exploding over Cuba, California and Japan are all related to, or fragments of this same one in Russia?

    Or are they all seperate incidents?

    If they are all seperate incidents it seems too high of a coincidence for so many large ones to break into our atmosphere within 24hours around the globe?

  5. Irene C says:

    It’s about time they take the smaller strikes as important as the possible larger ones.

  6. niebo says:

    In the beginning, there was Sputnik, a satellite that was built and launched into orbit by the USSR, which served as genesis for the space-race, a race which escalated the “cold war” and culminated in the “star wars” programs of the eighties that saw networks of missile-scorching lasers launched into the vacuum to assure the good citizens of the US that no “commie rockets” would survive re-entry to fall on our heads and vaporize our people and stuff . . . and here, now, after all the years that we built rocks to throw at each other, our collective attention is diverted to another sort of rock altogether, and: “Several have announced plans to create state-of-the-art detection systems, ” none of which will be operational before 2015. . . . This is the arrogant, self-serving, pocket-lining, political pandering CRAP that deserves to be reduced to ashes by one of these fireballs. Unbelievable.

  7. Louise Page says:

    In my humble way of thinking, I would have thought that the knowledge of asteroids and their potential to drag, invite or be accompanied by other smaller ‘rocks’, and all of the ‘technology’ we seem to have these days, that the meteorites littering the planet recently (and probably still yet to come) would be expected to a degree.
    I wasn’t shocked about the fire balls/meteorites we have all witnessed – I, as a non scientist, expected such to occur, and I’m sure I am not the only world citizen to think along those lines.
    I feel sorry for all those people who were poorly affected by the impacts of recent meteorite events and that they (and the rest of the world) were not warned of their possibility.
    …just my thoughts….

    Best wishes, safety and peace to all.

  8. Fernando says:

    What Apostol Jhon saw was not STARS neither METEORITES falling to earth. What He saw was SATELLITES.

  9. starcrow says:

    It appears another “fireball” has been spotted over Florida Last night….

  10. starcrow says:

    Hoo boy, also reports from Saudi Arabia….

All comments are moderated. We reserve the right not to post any comment deemed defamatory, inappropriate, or spam.

Fill in your details below or click an icon to log in:

WordPress.com Logo

You are commenting using your WordPress.com account. Log Out / Change )

Twitter picture

You are commenting using your Twitter account. Log Out / Change )

Facebook photo

You are commenting using your Facebook account. Log Out / Change )

Connecting to %s