You've seen it plenty of times on the big screen: Scientists spot an enormous asteroid  hurtling toward Earth and the only hope for mankind is to send a team  to plant a nuclear bomb inside the looming monster. Despite several  suspenseful setbacks, the intrepid team is ultimately successful, and  the asteroid explodes into millions of pieces. Earth  is saved yet again from certain doom. Yahoo. Movies like "Deep Impact"  and "Armageddon" make it seem so easy. Surely nuclear weapons that can  obliterate entire cities contain enough destructive power to blow a  giant space rock to bits, right?
The answer is yes and no. To start with, asteroids come in all  shapes and sizes. Ceres, the largest known asteroid, stretches 580 miles  (933 kilometers) in diameter, while one of the smallest on record, 1991  BA, measures 20 feet (6 meters) across. An asteroid larger than 6.2  miles (10 kilometers) in diameter is considered "extinction class," or  powerful enough to destroy life on Earth if it collides with our hapless  planet [source: NASA].
Technically, a nuclear bomb could obliterate a smaller asteroid, but  it's not these smaller entities that pose a threat to Earth's safety.  The asteroids that would be really worrisome -- those larger than 1,312  feet (400 meters) -- wouldn't be easily wiped out by such a bomb. Sure,  great hunks of one might break off, but not enough to neutralize the  danger. A 2007 NASA  report indicated that planting a nuclear bomb on or under the surface  of an asteroid would most likely cause it to fracture into several  pieces -- and large pieces of an even larger asteroid can still be  pretty dangerous if they're hurtling toward the Earth [source: NASA].
     So while yes, a nuclear bomb could be used to blow up a small  asteroid, it's unlikely that world leaders would waste expensive  resources on that endeavor. As for large, Earth-threatening asteroids, a  nuke likely wouldn't succeed at blowing it up completely.
 There's Ida. She's roughly 32 miles (52  kilometers) across. An asteroid like her would spell big trouble for our  planet if she ever got the notion to visit
NASA's Asteroid Defense Plan
So a nuclear bomb would be essentially useless at disintegrating an asteroid several miles wide, but scientists at NASA think that a nuclear weapon could be used in a different way to defend the planet.
In 2005, U.S. Congress asked NASA to develop plans for preventing an asteroid-Earth  collision. In 2007, the space agency presented its ideas at the  Planetary Defense Conference in Washington, D.C. (which sounds like  something out of a sci-fi flick). In its report,  NASA outlined several options, a few of which involved using nuclear  explosives to deflect the asteroid away from Earth. The force from the  explosions would (hopefully) provide enough momentum to nudge the  asteroid in a different direction, preventing disaster.
     In the explosions category, NASA discovered that nuclear explosives  are way more effective for asteroid deflection than non-nuclear  explosives, due to the sheer amount of energy they produce. NASA tested  four nuclear scenarios: a surface explosion, a delayed surface  explosion, a subsurface explosion and a standoff explosion (where the  bomb doesn't come into contact with the asteroid). The surface and  subsurface explosions are the most effective, but there's a good chance  of splitting the asteroid. In the end, the space agency determined that a  series of standoff nuclear explosions would be the most effective way  to deflect an asteroid headed for Earth.
     The best option in the non-nuclear category is a kinetic  impact (a nice way of saying they would ram objects into the asteroid),  but doing so would require detailed knowledge of what the surface of  the asteroid is like. Some other non-nuclear options that NASA  considered include using a laser  or a giant mirror to focus energy on a spot on the asteroid and "boil  off" parts of it, or using a spacecraft to tug the asteroid in a  different direction.
So, will we ever know in our lifetime if it's possible to deflect  an asteroid? Maybe. In December 2009, the director of the Russian  Federal Space Agency, Anatoly Perminov, announced that Russia was  considering making plans to deflect the 270-meter (885-foot) asteroid  Apophis from its possible collision course with Earth. While NASA claims  that the chances of Apophis colliding with Earth are only about 1 in  250,000, it does demonstrate that shooting objects at asteroids to knock  them out of the way is a definite possibility [source: Discovery News].
 by "environment clean generations"


Tidak ada komentar:
Posting Komentar