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Scientists believe Meteor Crater in Arizona was created 49,000 years ago when a fragment fell from a large space rock and struck the ground at 25,000 mph.
NASA via Getty Images |
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Asteroids are big hunks of space dust and rock that will eventually smack into Earth and end life as we know it. Or they represent the new frontier of space exploration.
Or both. It depends on how you look at it. Experts have been wary of asteroids since they came to the conclusion that one of them ended the Age of the Dinosaurs 65 million years ago. Scientists But others consider asteroids the next landscape for scientific discovery. "We're looking at the possibilities," says Kelly Humphries, a spokesman for NASA's Johnson Space Center. With NASA planning a moon-exploring spacecraft, Humphries says, "Anything robust enough to go to the moon is going to be
In December, NASA astronaut Edward Lu told Space.com that plans under study include landing on an asteroid and retrieving rock samples for return to And at NASA's Ames Research Center, lab chief Simon "Pete" Worden, a longtime advocate of such exploration, has set aside $10 million for designing The space agency does have a few asteroid missions already planned. In its just-released 2008 budget, NASA said it is studying a mission, dubbed the In June, NASA will launch the Dawn mission to orbit the two largest asteroids, Ceres and Vesta, in the main asteroid belt between Mars and Jupiter. And outside NASA, others also see asteroids' scientific potential. "They are pristine in a way, vagabonds of the solar system, leftovers from the era of the formation of the planets," says American Museum of Natural History astrophysicist Neil deGrasse Tyson, host of PBS'
NOVA scienceNOW, and author of the new book Death by Black Hole and Other Cosmic Quandaries. The International Astronomical Union has given identifying numbers to nearly 150,000 asteroids; about 5,000 are discovered every month. A mix of sand piles, Closer to home, NASA has, as of November, tracked 855 potentially dangerous Near-Earth asteroids. These pass within about 30 million miles of Earth, with NASA operates a program, the Spaceguard Survey, to track this "cosmic shooting gallery," in the words of NASA scientist David Morrison, aiming to identify Tyson says such asteroids offer an intriguing array of midway points between the four-day trip to the moon and the six-month voyage to Mars. "As steppingstones to Mars, (asteroids) are a really good way to learn to leave the comfort of the Earth-Moon system," says Binzel. "There are literally That's because asteroids have hardly any gravity. So fuel costs for blasting out of each one's "gravity well" are minimal. Eros, a hefty near-Earth asteroid, some And NASA's plans include building a rocket capable of sending astronauts to the moon, called Ares 1, which is scheduled to be ready for flight testing in For something a bit sooner, Morrison will describe a Near-Earth Asteroid Trailblazing (NEAT) probe, low-cost landers designed to flit among nearby asteroids, "Landing on one would be more like docking with the international space station than a moon landing," says astronomer Daniel Durda of the Southwest ..."From a practical point of view, some time in the future, one of these things is going to threaten Earth with an impact and we'll need to do something about it," Durda says. So why not visit one to get the hang of herding them? he asks. ...One of the most interesting, Apophis, grabbed headlines three years ago because of the possibility that it would smack into Earth in 2036. Improved But the asteroid's close approach in 2029 to within 22,600 miles of Earth, closer than the moon, may offer an exploration opportunity. In 2005, Lu and another astronaut, Stanley Love, proposed a "gravity tractor" design for deflecting Apophis and other asteroids from Earth. "Our suggested alternative is to have the spacecraft simply hover above the surface of the asteroid. The spacecraft tows it without physical attachment by using gravity as a towline," they wrote in the journal Nature. Once in orbit and gravitationally bound to a dangerous asteroid, the space tractor would gently fire its thrusters to slowly "tug" the threatening rock onto a safer trajectory. Apophis, for example, would require a one-ton tug to orbit the asteroid for a month before its 2029 close pass by Earth to put it onto a safer path. ...One of the great uncertainties about asteroids is what they are made of, something that might make astronauts piloting robotic surveyors more likely than
...Broadly speaking, inhabitants of the main asteroid belt between Mars and Jupiter are thought to come in three flavors: dark carbon-rich "carbonaceous" ones But nobody knows for sure, Binzel says, which makes exploring asteroids an exciting prospect. A few are likely burned-out comets plying their retirement (Space law still has a few wrinkles to iron out first though on mining asteroids, cautions Frans von der Dunk of the International Institute of Air and Space Law "Asteroids have been a low priority for too long," says Burrows, The Survival Imperative author, who calls for long-term space colonies to serve as a refuge for humanity if there's a catastrophic collision. "People worry about terrorism, with good reason, but while it doesn't do to get over-excited, there are bigger threats." ... Asteroid scares may become more common, as a result, as presenters including Lu and Morrison will discuss, but the opportunities for exploration are expected to increase, as well.
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