NASA ‘unable to stop’ enormous asteroid Bennu which could hit Earth in 2135
NASA will be unable to stop an enormous asteroid which could crash into Earth in 2135, scientists have warned.
It is estimated that Bennu, which is the size of the Empire State Building, would unleash 1,200 megatons of energy on impact, 80,000 times the energy of the Hiroshima bomb.
Members of a US ‘national planetary defence team’ have published a study warning of the potentially “dire” consequences of the huge space rock smashing into the planet.
Scientists based at the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory have been working with NASA on a spacecraft called HAMMER (Hypervelocity Asteroid Mitigation Mission for Emergency Response vehicle).
Reminiscent of the "Pale Blue Dot" image taken by @NASAVoyager 1 today in 1990, our @OSIRISREx mission took this pic of Earth & the Moon from 39.5 million miles away as it heads to asteroid Bennu to collect samples and return them to Earth. Take a look: https://t.co/ZS7pvF2WtP pic.twitter.com/hzIKSzVXVf
— NASA (@NASA) February 15, 2018
This leaves only the dangerous nuclear option, which is not preferred as it could result in the Earth being showered with radioactive rock fragments.
Bennu has a 1 in 2,700 chance of striking Earth on September 25, 2135.
Kirsten Howley, who is a physicist at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory and co-author on the paper, said: “The chance of an impact appears slim now, but the consequences would be dire.
“This study aims to help us shorten the response timeline when we do see a clear and present danger so we can have more options to deflect it. The ultimate goal is to be ready to protect life on Earth.”
The study said it would take a minimum of 7.4 years to reach Bennu if the decision was made to send a craft and “many years for the small change in speed to accumulate into a sufficient change in trajectory”.
Ms Howley said: “The probability of a Bennu impact may be 1 in 2,700 today, but that will almost certainly change – for better or worse – as we gather more data about its orbit.
“Delay is the greatest enemy of any asteroid deflection mission. That’s why there’s urgency in getting viable deflection platforms on the shelf today.”
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