Small Asteroid To Buzz Earth
ddelmonte writes in to tell us about a small near-earth object, discovered just 2 days ago, that is expected to pass within 64,000 km of our planet on March 2, 13:44 UT. NEO 2009 DD45 will be well inside the Moon's orbit and just under twice the altitude of geosynchronous satellites. According to Sky and Telescope, 2009 DD45's closest approach will be over the Pacific west of Tahiti, so observers in Australia, Japan, and perhaps Hawaii will have the best chance of spotting it with, say, an 8-in. telescope. Here's where you can generate an ephemeris of the object for your location. At closest approach NEO 2009 DD45 will be moving half a degree per minute and peaking around magnitude 10.5. It will be brighter than 13th magnitude for only a few hours.
Why can't we send a probe that will land on this asteroid and then piggy ride on it. That way we don't need more fuel to carry it round the solar system. If the asteroid doesn't go where we want, then have a relaunch mechanism for the probe to get off at the most suitable point in the asteroid's orbit.
While you're absolutely correct, there is a program known as Operationally Responsive Space (ORS) thats being headed up by DoD rather than NASA that is headed in that direction. I think the time-frame they're considering is closer to 2 weeks, but the general idea is to be able to recognize a need, and design, construct and launch a mission in that period of time. That includes getting adjustable plug-and-play parts (GNC, Power, structures, propulsion) that you can tune and modify quickly to fit the mission profile.
Presumably, a lot of the work to streamline the process of designing the bus and plugging in instruments could be easily translated to space science missions, and if a future opportunity like this were available we could do exactly that. Of course, you'd have to have a pretty interesting guidance system and a very robust structure, since you'd only get an advantage if you stuck the probe in the asteroids path and let it slam into it to get the momentum.
While right now 64,000 puts it fairly far out in terms of all the junk orbiting the earth, it is significantly closer than the moon is. Even if it still missed the earth, just a few thousand kilometers closer and it could reek havoc on all the man-made junk spinning around the Earth. How much potential damage/debris could that cause?
The musings of just another geek and his junk.