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NASA Making Plans To Save the Earth

aluminumangel writes, "Taking a page out of a Michael Bay movie, NASA is considering a manned mission to land on an asteroid, 'poke one with a stick,' and see how feasible it would be to deflect it from its course. Obviously, the application would be valuable in a doomsday situation and hopefully could keep us from going wherever the dinosaurs went." The article makes oblique reference to another goal such a mission could serve: giving us something to do in space, something to engage the paying public, between the time we return to the Moon and the time we get to Mars.

6 of 226 comments (clear)

  1. Get you insightful replies... by jginspace · · Score: 3, Informative

    ...from the original

  2. Several thoughts by WindBourne · · Score: 1, Informative
    1. We should be sending several automated system to do this, not a human crew. Much cheaper and easier.
    2. Why send the asteroid elsewhere? If it is going to hit Earth, put it into orbit. If it is big enough to worry about, then it must be a good size chunk of metal. We can mine it.
    3. One of the more useful uses for this is to send asteroids into Mars. Not the metal kind, but one based on organics. There are a number of them out there that are composed of Water, Ammonia or even of methane. These would be great to send directly into mars and build up the gases that are lacking. Ammonia is a very effective global warming gas that slow breaks down to N2, the perfect gas for life. H2o is also a good one.
    4. Of course, we could simply turn an asteroid into a nice space ship.
    --
    I prefer the "u" in honour as it seems to be missing these days.
  3. Re:NASA planning to save the Earth by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

    Ask and ye shall receive! ---> 1999 AN10

    Here's what you've all been waiting for.

  4. Re:Armageddon wouldn't even be close. by guardiangod · · Score: 3, Informative

    Perhaps I should explain this without resorting to the use of sarcasm - they are popular misconceptions, after all.

    An asteroid, moving through space, has velocity (relatively to the earth) 5 - 20 km/s. Now, most of the earth's atmosphere is about 5 km thick (the rest are light elements scattered in the exosphere). That means it takes
    less than a second
    for any asteroid to get though the earth's atmosphere! This is the reason why meteoroids are below freezing (instead of glowing red hot) after they landed on earth - they don't have time to heat up through friction.

    Second of all, impact cratering is calculated by the kinetic energy of the asteroid. Size means jack. Which means that as long as the most of the things landed on earth, we get craters.

    What all these means is unless you can blow up the asteroid in such a way that they are smaller than your garden's peddles, they will still hit earth. Can fusion bomb do that?

  5. Re:They need to hurry by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

    Look at me I can steal comments from Another posting too. I am SOOO original.

    Get a job FAG!!!

    - Wolf Bearclaw

  6. Re:Armageddon wouldn't even be close. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

    You are making the assumption that meteors fall perpendicular to the Earth rather than at an angle.