Title: Finding Potentially Hazardous Asteroids
1Finding Potentially Hazardous Asteroids
- Nick Kaiser
- (with lots of help from Jim Heasley, Dave Tholen
and Rob Jedicke) - IfA Open House
- 04/26/03
2Outline
- The asteroid hazard
- How do asteroids become hazardous?
- What can be done about it?
- What is the IfA doing about it?
- Pan-STARRS
3The asteroid hazard
- The historical record
- From air-bursts to mass extinctions
4Celestial Bombardment!
- Craters on
- Moon, Mercury,
- Venus, Mars
- And
- EARTH !!!
5Celestial Bombardment!
Celestial Bombardment on the Moon!
6Earth Has Been Hit Before!
- Asteroid crater in Canada
- seen from space
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8Earth Has Been Hit Before!
- Meteor crater in Arizona was formed about
50,000 years ago. The impacting iron meteorite
had a mass of 1 million tons and diameter of 50
meters. The impact blast was equivalent to a 20
megaton nuclear weapon and produced a crater over
1 km in diameter.
9Earth Has Been Hit Before!
- In 1908 a blast equivalent to a 15 megaton
bomb occurred near the Tunguska river in Siberia.
It occurred about 8 km over the Earths surface,
flattening trees over a thousand square
kilometers. The object was a stony body with a
mass of 100,000 tons.
10When the last Big-One Hit
- The impact that is thought to have killed off
the dinosaurs -- the Chicxulub crater, which is
off the Yuchatan peninsula in the Gulf of
Mexico--was produced by an object 10-15 km in
diameter, resulting in a crater 200 km in
diameter.
11Honolulu Advertiser October 10, 2002
12It Can Happen Again!
- Public awareness of the danger from celestial
impacts was heightened by the break up of comet
Shoemaker-Levy 9 after a close pass by Jupiter. - On its next orbit, the fragments collided with
Jupiter producing atmospheric explosions.
13It Can Happen Again!
- Impact of comet segments
- on Jupiter observed with
- IfA UH 88 telescope and
- infrared camera
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15It Can Happen Again!
- Even more recently, CNN and other news agencies
reported that on March 8, 2002 asteroid 2002 EM7
passed within 288,000 miles of Earth. - This object is slightly larger than the Tunguska
impactor and could have caused considerable
damage had it hit the planet. - 2002 EM7 came out of our blind spot, coming from
the direction of the Sun. We didnt see it until
after it had passed!
16known asteroids in solar system
17The asteroid collision rate
18risk from asteroids
19Summary of risk
- Mass extinctions
- every few tens of millions of years
- Global catastrophes
- million year events
- Regional damage/tsunamis
- 1000MT impacts every 70,000 years
- Tunguska events
- one per 1000 years
- Bottom line
- You are as likely to die from an asteroid strike
as to die in an air crash
20Collision risk from sub-km size asteroids
- Most of risk comes from km size objects and
larger - Very infrequent but very damaging
- Smaller objects can be damaging too
- Asteroid strikes in the ocean will generate big
waves - But will they cause much damage?
- Or will they break with little damage on the
continental shelf?
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22Los Angeles Basin
23How do asteroids become harmful
- Most asteroids reside in the main belt between
mars and jupiter and are harmless - But gravitational jostling can push asteroids
onto unstable orbits - These orbits then evolve, becoming elliptical and
entering the inner solar system. - Once on such an orbit, they last about 100M
years, after which time they either get ejected
or collide with a planet or with the sun
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25What can be done to reduce the risk?
- Asteroid collisions are one of many natural
hazards - But we can do something about it
- Go out and find all the potentially hazardous
objects and see if they are actually hazardous - If they all turn out to be safe then the risk
will have been eliminated - If not..
26Mandate by U.S. Congress
- 1991 U.S. Congress directed NASA to conduct
workshops on how potentially threatening
asteroids could be detected, and how they could
be deflected or destroyed. - 1994 House Comm. on Science/Technology directed
NASA and DoD to identify and catalogue within 10
years orbits of all comets and asteroids 1km
crossing orbit of Earth
27Modern Existing Searches
- Among the active search programs in the U.S.
are - Spacewatch (Kitt Peak in Arizona)
- NEAT (JPL using USAF Maui telescopes)
- LINEAR (Lincoln Labs at White Sands, NM)
- LONEOS (Lowell Observatory)
- IfA UH88
28 Killer Asteroids and new
solar system objects
Detection with UH 88
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30What is the IfA doing?
- Pan-STARRS - a new telescope facility
- 4 smallish (1.8m) telescopes, but with extremely
wide field of view - Can scan the sky rapidly and repeatedly, and can
detect very faint objects - Project led by IfA with help from Air Force, Maui
High Performance Computer Center, MITs Lincoln
Lab and Science Applications International Corp.
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32Optical design
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39Pan-STARRS numbers
- 4 telescopes
- 4 billion pixels
- 10 terabytes per night
- 30 petabytes in 10 years
- 30,000,000,000,000,000 bytes!
40Pan-STARRS Asteroid Search Strategy
- Pan-STARRS will target potentially hazardous
objects - Objects that may become actually hazardous in
100 years
41Potentially Hazardous Asteroids
42Pan-STARRS capability
- Pan-STARRS will become operational in 2006
- By that time, the existing search programs will
have found 70-80 of the 1km size objects, but
will be running out of steam - Pan-STARRS will push the completeness for km size
objects to near unity - And will find most of the objects with diameter
300m - Pan-STARRS will also do lots of other science,
ranging from the formation of the solar system to
the fate of the Universe as a whole.