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Could Earth Be Hit, Like Jupiter Just Was?

2009-07-29 06:18:42

Charles Q. Choi

Special to SPACE.com

SPACE.com charles Q. Choi

special To Space.com

space.com Tue Jul 28, 10:45 am ET

The recent bruising Jupiter received from a cosmic impact is a violent reminder

that our solar system is a shooting gallery that sometimes blasts Earth.

Still, what are the odds of a cosmic impact threatening our planet?

So far 784 near-Earth objects (NEOs) more than a half-mile wide (1 km) have

been found.

"If an object of about the same size that just hit Jupiter also hit Earth it

was probably a typical cometary object of a kilometer or so in size (0.6 miles)

it would have been fairly catastrophic," explained astronomer Donald Yeomans,

manager of NASA's Near-Earth Object program office at the Jet Propulsion

Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif.

Scientists have ruled out the chances of an Earth impact for all of these 784

large NEOs. Still, lesser objects also pose a risk, and researchers estimate

more than 100 large NEOS remain to be found.

Small risk

Billions of years ago, impacts were far more common. Our moon retains a record

of the pummeling it and Earth took: the moon's craters remain, while on Earth,

most scars of ancient impacts have been folded back into the planet or

weathered away.

Today's solar system is far less crowded, and in fact Jupiter, having more mass

and gravity, scoops up a lot of the dangerous objects, as does the sun.

Currently just one NEO of all the objects scientists are tracking poses any

significant chance of hitting the Earth 2007 VK184. If this roughly

425-foot-wide (130 meters) asteroid hit our planet, it would strike with an

energy of roughly 150 million tons of TNT, or more than 10,000 times that of

the atom bomb dropped on Hiroshima.

Roughly 100 telescopic observations made so far suggest that 2007 VK184 has a

1-in-2,940 chance of hitting Earth 40 to 50 years from now. However, if the

past is any guide, further observations to refine computations of its orbit

very likely will downgrade its probability of hitting Earth to virtually

nothing, Yeomans said.

Of remaining concern are the NEOs that we do not see. Researchers suspect about

156 large NEOs 1 kilometer in diameter or larger remain to be found, and when

it comes to dangerous NEOs in general, "when we get down to 140 meters (460

feet) or larger diameter objects, we think we've discovered about 15 percent of

them, and with 50 meters (164 feet) or larger diameter, we've discovered less

than 5 percent of them," Yeomans explained.

On average, an NEO roughly a half-mile wide or larger hits the Earth roughly

every 500,000 years, "so we're not expecting one anytime soon," Yeomans

explained.

"For 500 meters (1,640 feet), we're talking a mean interval of about 100,000

years," he added. "When you get down to 50 meters, the mean interval is about

700 years, and for 30 meters (98 feet), about 140 years or so, but by then

you're getting down to a size where you won't expect any ground damage, as they

burn up in the atmosphere at about 25 meters (82 feet) in diameter and smaller,

probably for an impressive fireball event."

When it comes to truly monstrous NEOs some 10 kilometers (6.2 miles) or larger,

of the size thought to have helped kill off the dinosaurs, "that's a 100

million year event, and in fact, I don't think there is anything like that we

see right now," Yeomans said. "The largest near-Earth object that can actually

cross the Earth's path, Sisyphus, has a diameter of 8 kilometers (5 miles), and

the largest that is termed a potential hazard is Toutatis, which has a diameter

of approximately 5.4 km (3.35 miles)."

Keeping watch

There are currently four teams worldwide actively looking for both large and

small NEOs, Yeomans said. "We're concentrating on the large ones for now, but

hopefully with the next generation of search, we'll be more efficient in

finding the smaller objects, to find 90 percent of the total population of

potential hazards larger than 140 meters," he added.

Keeping an eye on NEOs might not just be healthy for humanity, but also help

lead us out into space.

"They're easy objectives to get to, and asteroids have significant metal

resources that can be mined, while comets have significant water resources for

space habitats or travel," Yeomans said. "If you want to build a habitat in

space, you're not going to build it all on the ground and launch it up, since

that's too expensive you want to go up and look for resources instead."

Furthermore, asteroids and comets are among the objects that have changed the

least since the birth of the solar system roughly 4.6 billion years ago, and

might reveal vital clues behind the mysterious process.

"They may well have delivered the water and carbon-based molecules to Earth

that allowed life to form, so they're extremely important for study in that

direction," Yeomans added.