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MIT:
Asteroid is "practice case" for potential hazards
Friday, October 12, 2007
In research that could aid
decisions about future asteroids on a collision course with
Earth, MIT researchers have for the first time determined the
composition of a near-Earth asteroid that has a very slight
possibility of someday hitting our planet.
That information could be
useful in planning any future space mission to explore the
asteroid, called Apophis. And if the time ever were to come when
this object or another turned out to be on its way toward an
impact on Earth, knowing what it's made of could be one important
factor in deciding what to do about it.
"Basic characterization is
the first line of defense," says Richard P. Binzel,
Professor of Planetary Sciences in the Department of Earth,
Atmospheric, and Planetary Sciences (EAPS). "We've got to
know the enemy."
Binzel presented the new
findings this week at the annual meeting of the Division for
Planetary Sciences of the American Astronomical Society.
Studying the composition of
Apophis has been a useful "practice case," Binzel says,
because "you never know when the real one will come along"
that is on a collision with the Earth. For determining the
composition of a threatening asteroid, Binzel says, "We
don't know when the real test will come, but we're ready."
On April 13, 2029, Apophis will
come relatively close to Earth (it will miss us by about 22,000
miles). But when it comes by again in 2036, there is a very small
possibility - about one chance in 45,000 - that it could be on a
collision course.
So Binzel, working with EAPS
graduate students Cristina Thomas and Francesca DeMeo and others,
has been using telescopes on Earth to find out as much as
possible about the nature of Apophis and other asteroids. Short
of putting together a space mission that would take years and
cost hundreds of millions of dollars, such observations are the
best way to find out as much as possible about any space rock
that might someday be coming our way, Binzel says.
Using the MIT Magellan
telescope in Chile and NASA's Infrared Telescope Facility in
Hawaii, they have now been able to figure out exactly what
Apophis is made of. "The composition, I think, is really
nailed," he says.
The key to understanding the
mineral makeup of an asteroid is to compare it with samples of
asteroidal material that have been delivered, free of charge, to
the Earth, in the form of the many thousands of meteorites that
have been collected over the years.
Spectral analysis - measuring
how the meteorites reflect light of different wavelengths - can
be used to determine their exact mineral constituents. Similarly,
a spectral analysis of the light reflected from a distant
asteroid shows the same telltale lines that reveal its
composition. By comparing the two kinds of spectra, an asteroid
that is just a faraway pinprick of light can be correlated with a
piece of a space rock in the laboratory.
Binzel and his students were
able to use both visible-light and infrared spectroscopy to show
that Apophis is "a good match" for a rare type of
meteorite, known as a type LL chondrite. These represent just 7
percent of the known meteorite falls on Earth, and are rich in
the minerals pyroxene and olivine, which are also common on
Earth.
"The beauty of having
found a meteorite match for Apophis is that because we have
laboratory measurements for the density and strength of these
meteorites, we can infer many of the same properties for the
asteroid Apophis itself," Binzel says.
An object the size of Apophis
(about 270 meters across) could devastate a region as large as
France, or produce tsunamis over a wide area if it struck at sea.
Many ideas have been proposed for how to deal with such a threat,
ranging from using bombs, lasers or spacecraft to nudge it out of
the way to blowing it to pieces while it is still far away. The
selection of the best course of action may depend of the physical
characteristics of the object, including its mineral composition.
Source:
MIT
Time
Stamp: 10/12/2007 at 10:21:02 AM CST

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