Planetary News: Near Earth Objects (2004)
What to Do When the Big One Heads Our Way?
Apparent Close Call by Asteroid Stirs Debate
By Amir Alexander
27 February 2004
It was the evening of January 13, 2004, and Richard Miles
was alarmed. A British amateur astronomer specializing in tracking Near Earth
Objects (NEO’s) , he had just logged on to the NEO Confirmation Page
of the Minor Planet Center website, where professional observatories post
the latest detections of space rocks. One of the objects reported, designated
AL00667, struck him as incredible: according to the web page, over the next
24 hours the object was to increase in brightness 40 times over. Like bright
headlights on a dark road, this could mean only one thing: AL00667 was heading
straight towards us!
As it turned out AL00667, later designated 2004AS1, was harmless. Observations
on following nights revealed that it was much larger and much further away
than was initially suspected. It passed the Earth at a safe distance, giving
our home planet a wide 8 million miles berth. But what occurred in the hours
between the object’s first detection and the time late that night when
it was determined that it was not going to impact the Earth has become the
object of a fierce controversy in the NEO community.
According to a New York Times report, it all began when Dr. Timothy Spahr
of the Minor Planet Center at the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics
was sifting through the latest observations from LINEAR – a NEO search
using an automated telescope located in New Mexico. Spahr selected a few of
the more interesting objects, and ran them through a computer program that
calculates possible orbits, and posted the results on the web. He did not
notice that the projected orbit of one of the bodies would take it directly
through the Earth.
Others, however, did notice. In Britain, Miles began scanning the patch of
sky where the asteroid would appear if it were heading towards Earth. In Germany,
Amateur astronomer Reiner Stoss set astronomers chat rooms around the world
buzzing, when he pointed out the implications of the posted orbit.
Professional astronomers also began to take note. Late that night Dr. Steven
Chesley of the Near Earth Objects office at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory
managed to reach Spahr, who until that time was unaware of the storm he had
conjured. Together they calculated that the chances of the asteroid hitting
the Earth were between 10 and 40 percent.
What was needed was an additional observation that would establish whether
2004AS1 was headed towards the Earth or not. Unfortunately, the skies over
much of Europe and the United States were cloudy that day, blocking out the
night sky for many professional and amateur star-gazers. Eventually, at 3:30am,
amateur astronomer Brian Warner at the Palmer Divide Observatory in Colorado
looked at the patch of sky where the rock would have been if it was on a collision
course with the Earth. He found nothing, and the “emergency” passed.
But while 2004AS1 sailed by the Earth without causing a ripple, the events
of the night of January 14 stirred up a storm in their wake. The main, and
still unresolved, issue at stake is simple: what should astronomers do if
they discover a space object that appears likely to strike the Earth within
hours or days?
Some astronomers, including Clark Chapman of the Southwest Research Institute,
and David Morrison, chair of the International Astronomical Union’s
Working Group on Near Earth Objects, were extremely concerned that night ,and
were beginning to consider when they should raise the alarm with government
authorities. “I would not have been comfortable with being quiet through
the next morning” Chapman told the New York Times.
Many others disagreed. “They completely misread the situation,” Benny
Peiser of the Liverpool John Moores University told the BBC. “There
was plenty of time to get other observers on the job.” “I find
it incredible that such action was contemplated after just four observations” seconded
Brian Marsden, director of the Minor Planets Center. “That is just not
enough to yield a sensible orbit.” Donald Yeomans, head of the Near
Earth Objects program at NASA also argued for caution, telling the New York
Times that another set of observations confirming the collision path would
be required before scientists could reasonably consider notifying the authorities.
The upshot of this debate is that it has become clear that there are currently
no set procedures in place to deal with such an event. While NASA’s “Spaceguard” program
is designed to detect objects orbiting near the Earth, the program’s
focus is only on large rocks, over 1 kilometer in length, and on long lead
times of months and years before an impact could be possible. There is as
yet no program or plan to deal with smaller objects that may slam into the
Earth with advance notice of only hours or days.
When on the night of January 13 it seemed possible that a large space rock
was hurtling towards the Earth, it was not at all clear to astronomers what
should be done about it, and who, if anyone, should be notified. One likely
outcome of the storm is that when another space rock appears to have the Earth
in its cross-hairs, astronomers will be prepared.
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