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Learn about the threat asteroids and comets pose to Earth, possible countermeasures, impacts of past events, and mitigation strategies for global disasters. Understand the risk, impact sizes, and environmental consequences of such collisions. Explore the fragility vs. robustness of civilizations, the psychological and societal responses to catastrophes, and the importance of hazard mitigation efforts to safeguard our planet.
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The Threat to Earth from Asteroids and Comets… and Possible Countermeasures Clark R. Chapman Southwest Research Inst. Boulder, Colorado “Managing Global Scale Disasters” Western Psychological Association Irvine, California 12 April 2002
The Hazard from Asteroids and Comets • Each year, there is a 1-in-200,000 chance that an asteroid or comet more than one kilometer wide will strike the Earth. • 40 percent of these objects remain to be found, and could strike without warning, threatening the future of civilization. • This extreme example of a natural disaster (a tiny chance of happening, but with huge consequences) challenges a rational response by citizens and policy-makers.
The processes that formed the planets 4.6 billion years ago left smaller comets and asteroids… some of which occasionally cross the Earth’s orbit and can strike our planet if it happens to be there at the same time.
Larger impacts happen rarely in human history... This Siberian forest (the size of a major city) was felled in 1908 by a 15-Megaton asteroid explosion
Still larger, globally destructive impacts happen very rarely... • Comet Shoemaker- Levy 9 struck the planet Jupiter in 1994, blackening parts of its atmosphere larger than the whole planet Earth • But Earth is struck by devastating objects less often… every million years Image from Peter McGregor and Mark Allen, ANU 2.3m telescope.
What Do We Know About the Impact Hazard? • How many asteroids and comets there are of various sizes in Earth-approaching orbits (hence, impact frequencies are known). • How much energy is delivered by impact (such as the TNT equivalence, size of resulting crater). • How much dust is raised into the stratosphere and other environmental consequences. • Biosphere response (agriculture, forests, human beings, ocean life) to environmental shock. • Response of human psychology, sociology, political systems, and economies to such a catastrophe. That’s where YOU come in! WE KNOW THIS… Very Poorly Somewhat Very Well Very Well
Classification of Hazards • High Altitude Disintegration (Brilliant Flash of Light) • Projectile fragments and disperses at high altitudes (over 40 km) • Negligible surface damage • Local/Regional Effects (Blast Damage, Tsunami) • Projectile explodes in lower atmosphere or craters surface • Severe localized damage from blast or flooding by tsunami • Global Damage (Environmental Disaster) • Short-term global-scale climatic changes (e.g. impact winter) • Global loss of food crops leads to large-scale famine, disease, and possible breakdown of civilization • Mass Extinction (Environmental Holocaust) • Severe global environmental destruction (e.g. K/T event) • Many species lost forever; all, or nearly all, human beings die Decade Millennium Million Years Hundred Million Years
Is Civilization Robust or Fragile? A State of Mind…? • Arguments for Fragility • Modern people are disconnected from nature, survivability • Technology is ever more specialized • People are interdependent on distant resources, other nations • If societal breakdown spawns violence, modern weaponry is very dangerous • Arguments for Robustness • Technological refugia exist (such as bomb shelters) • Society has become experienced in disaster recovery • Technological know-how has become pervasive • Historical precedence; recovery from WWII was rapid
Risk vs. Scale of Impact • Annual fatalities peak for events near the “threshold size”, about 2 km • Orange/yellow zone illustrates our range of uncertainties for agricultural disaster due to stratospheric dust Stratospheric Dust Tsunami
A Royal Flush Odds:1 to 649,739 • It is more likely that a mile-wide asteroid will strike Earth next year than that the next poker hand you are dealt will be a royal flush.
20th Century Catastrophes: We have much more to worry about! Source: John Pike • Averaged over long durations, the death rate expected from impacts is similar to that from volcanoes.
Chances from Dying from Selected Causes (for U.S.A.) By terrorism (year 2001) By terrorism (since 1970)
Mitigation Options • Spaceguard Survey (ongoing telescopic search) • 90% of hazardous NEAs may be found by 2010, certified as safe. • Very unlikely: one is found that will strike Earth within decades. • Deflect Asteroid away from Earth (nudge it from threatening path) • Spacecraft technologies exist to deliver deflection devices to threatening asteroid, given years/decades warning and lead-time. • Low-thrust device options: rocket engine, solar sail, mass driver, even “paint-it-black” to take advantage of Yarkovsky Effect • Powerful devices: anchored bombs or stand-off neutron bomb • Standard Hazard Mitigation (THIS IS FOR YOU TO FIGURE OUT!) • Extrapolate civil defense/natural disaster management from local to world context (e.g. store food supplies, evacuate countries around ground zero, prepare for post-disaster crisis).
Headline: “Mile-Wide Asteroid Will Hit in 2028” Which is least likely to be correct? A. The news report is wrong due to bad or hyped journalism. B. The scientific forecaster goofed. We’re safe. C. The astronomers erred. The asteroid is tiny; most of the world is safe. D. An asteroid will hit Earth in 2028. The correct answer is “D”: A, B, and C are all much more likely to explain the headline.
The “Scary” Case of 1997 XF11 10 5 (100000 km) 0 -5 -10 -15 -15 -10 -5 0 5 10 15 (100000 km) • In March 1998, head-lines warned of pos-sible impact in 2028. • The next day, old data ruled it out…but the prediction was badly mistaken.
Prediction is the Event • Scientists who predict think of predictions as dry scientific results, with objective error-bars. • Users of such predictions are mobilized into action by the prediction. • The predicted event may not happen as predicted; it may or may not have consequences. The predictions always have consequences. • Predictions of emotionally laden disasters result in subjective, sometimes irrational responses. • Predictions must be made with social responsibility, whether of a potential terrorist operation or of an asteroid impact.Astronomers are learning!
The Torino Scale Events Having No Likely Consequences Events MeritingCareful Monitoring Events MeritingConcern ThreateningEvents CertainCollisions
How the Torino Scale is Calculated: From the Probability of Impact and Size
Findings: Evaluation, Warning, and Mitigation • Existing structure is disorganized: Astronomers are just starting to learn how to communicate, but relevant agencies (e.g. FEMA) aren’t prepared to listen and act. • Asteroid deflection scenarios have been conceived, but no serious systems engineering or planning has been done to deal with various possible cases. • There is no known consideration by civil defense and disaster management agencies, let alone any assignment of responsibilities to relevant agencies. • No US governmental scientific advisory body has formally established the priority that the impact hazard should command with respect to other national priorities.
There Are Some Hopeful Signs • The British government debated the impact hazard and has started (a bit) to do something • The Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) Global Science Forum decided in January 2002 to make NEO’s one of its top priority projects through 2003 • SAIC and the US Air Force Space Command are investigating how to establish a “Natural Impact Warning Center” • Public interest remains high, even if there is very little governmental funding
Some Salient Facts about the Impact Hazard • It is not a “Deep Impact” or “Armageddon” shoot-em-down just before they hit scenario (sorry, Benny!) • For asteroids, orbiting in the inner solar system, it is a case of finding them decades in advance of an impact…with long lead-times for mitigation: For every asteroid with <1 year warning time, there are 50 with 5 decades of lead-time (but comets are another matter) • It is one of the few big hazards for which it is technologically feasible, with some confidence, to stop the catastrophe from happening (by deflection) • Near-miss scares and cries of “Wolf!” are much more likely than an actual catastrophic impact
Why are the big/rare ones so much more important than Tunguskas? • Only asteroids larger than ~1 mile across can be globally destructive and threaten civilization • For every devastating 15-MT Tunguska blast, there are ~100 earthquakes, floods, and typhoons that are equally destructive • Cost-effectiveness drops sharply with size: the average annual fatalities drop while the costs of finding the objects and responding to them rises But, there are contrary viewpoints and interests: On a politician’s “watch”, why would he/she care about what might happen decades from now? And there are “Star Warriors” in the DoD who would like to test their inventions and try shooting down small asteroids. And astronomers who would love to have more and bigger telescopes.
Conclusions…and Transition to the Psychological and Sociological Perspectives • The impact hazard is REAL but it is VERY UNLIKELY to happen during our lifetimes • Its potential consequences are horrific… exceeding any other natural hazard and equalling all-out nuclear war • We could avert a threatened impact • In a post-September 11th world, it is difficult (for me) to predict how people might react to near-misses, huge-but-low-probability disasters, bombs in space, and other impact hazard issues