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Message Subject What's really going on?
Poster Handle Icey
Post Content
We Might Be Able to Deflect an Asteroid by Sacrificing Satellites

Less than 50%

Some days, it feels like humanity is doing everything it can to hasten the end of the world, from creating weapons that can turn Earth into a nuclear hellscape to pumping formerly sequestered carbon into the atmosphere at ever-increasing rates. Still, these are things we as a species could stop doing if we wanted. We can’t just decide not to get wiped out by an asteroid. Stopping a big space rock from colliding with Earth would be a tall order with our current level of technology, but scientists now believe telecom satellites could help avert doomsday if an asteroid has Earth in its sights.

Ideally, astronomers would see an asteroid collision coming many years in advance, giving us time to develop a strategy for deflecting it. What happens if there isn’t much time, though? Assuming Bruce Willis is unavailable, a few big satellites might do. A team of scientists from Airbus has developed a mission concept for the European Space Agency (ESA) called Fast Kinetic Deflection (FastKD). The gist is that we run a few big telecom satellites into the approaching space rock, and hopefully, that knocks it off course.

The FastKD study used a 1,000-foot asteroid as an example. An object of this size would cause widespread destruction if it collided with Earth, but it’s still small enough that we might be able to nudge it out of the way. Large telecom satellites usually sit in high geostationary orbits. With a boost in the right direction, such a satellite could be placed on a collision course with an approaching asteroid where its four-to-six-ton bulk could help push it clear of Earth. The study estimates that it would take ten such collisions to deflect the theoretical 1,000-foot impactor.

[link to www.extremetech.com (secure)]
 
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