Ed Lu’s Message: Our Cosmic Challenge

russian meteor slider

images courtesy of independent.co.uk, thesun.co.uk, cnn.com

 

The B612 Foundation believes we should find threatening asteroids before they find us. Today’s meteor explosion over Chelyabinsk is a wake-up call that the Earth orbits the Sun in a shooting gallery of asteroids, and that these asteroids sometimes hit the Earth. Later today, a separate and larger asteroid, 2012 DA14, narrowly missed the Earth passing beneath the orbits of our communications satellites. We have the technology to deflect asteroids, but we cannot do anything about the objects we don’t know exist. To date, less than 1% of asteroids larger than the one that leveled Tunguska in 1908 have been tracked. The B612 Foundation Sentinel Space Telescope, to be launched in 2018, will provide a comprehensive map of the locations and trajectories of threatening asteroids and will give humanity the decades of warning needed to prevent asteroid impacts with existing technology. By the end of its planned lifetime, Sentinel will have discovered well over 90% of the asteroids that could destroy entire regions of Earth on impact (those larger than 350ft in diameter) and more than 50% of the currently unknown DA14-like near-Earth asteroids.

The B612 Foundation has undertaken this Sentinel project as a non-governmental initiative, somewhat akin to a growing number of private space ventures originated in the past few years. The foundation, however, is not undertaking this project for profit; we are a non-profit corporation. Our motivation is strictly to ensure the survival of life on Earth – all of it. And while NASA is cooperating with us by providing certain communication and analytic services, we are excited, as a private venture, to welcome the participation of all the crew of Spaceship Earth in this great endeavor.

Does the crew of Spaceship Earth raise our awareness and accept responsibility for our voyage into the future? Or do we sit back as passengers, comfortably assuming that there must be a captain and crew doing this job on our behalf?

The B612 Sentinel mission is testament to our belief that we, together, are responsible for the future of life on our small planet; we invite you to join us in addressing this cosmic challenge.

*****

B612′s co-founder and Chair Emeritus Rusty Schweickart has an important op-ed posted today in The Guardian. Please take a moment to read his thoughts, too.

Slooh Space Camera to Track Asteroid 2012 DA14 Skimming by Earth

Asteroid Show Poster  #2

Slooh Space Camera will cover its near-approach on Friday, February 15th, with several live shows on Slooh.com, free to the public, starting at 6 PM PST / 9 PM EST / 02:00 UTC (2/16) – accompanied by real-time discussions with Slooh Space Camera’s Paul Cox, astronomer and author Bob Berman, and Prescott Observatory manager, Matt Francis. Viewers can watch live on their PC or IOS/Android mobile device.

Here’s the link to their event, with International times: http://goo.gl/ythGd 

Flyby Visualization of 2012 DA14

Our friends at the California Academy of Sciences shared these video simulations so we can really see what DA14 will look like as it flies by Earth!  The green rings around the Earth are orbits of our geo-synchronous communications satellites.

Asteroid Encounter at University of Central Florida on Feb. 15

If you’re near the University of Central Florida this Friday, February 15, you can join Harold Reitsema, B612′s Mission Director for a free free 1 p.m. viewing party for the public for an exclusive look at the asteroid 2012 DA14 via feeds from telescopes in Spain.

Dr. Reitsema is a planetary astronomer who specializes in designing space science missions that probe the solar system and beyond. While at the University of Arizona, he discovered satellites of Saturn and Neptune. He recently retired from Ball Aerospace, where he led design teams for Hubble Space Telescope instruments and numerous space missions. At Ball Aerospace, he served as Director for Science Mission Development, Civil and Operational Space.

You can read more about the viewing party in these links:

http://knightlynews.cos.ucf.edu/?p=13982

http://news.cos.ucf.edu/?p=5222

#DA14 G+ Hangout Wednesday, February 13th

Updated 2/13/13, 12:30pm PT: Here is the link to the YouTube archive. Sorry we had technical difficulties joining the Hangout.

On Wednesday, February 13th @ 2pm ET, join us for a Google Hangout with our very own Ed Lu, fellow astronaut Ron Garan and “The Bad Astronomer” Phil Plait. We’ll be discussing the significance of DA14 and protecting humanity. CLICK here for the event details and RSVP.

If you cannot make it, there will be an archive on Ron’s YouTube channel. We’ll also post the link update on this blog post.

Over on Slate, Phil has a great write up about the event.

 

Dan Durda: We Live in a Cosmic Shooting Gallery

durdaAs the attention on Asteroid 2012 DA14′s flyby increases this week, we asked our friend and B612′s Board Director Dan Durda to share some of his thoughts on this event. 

The ‘close shave’ flyby of 2012 DA14 on February 15 provides a clear reminder that we live in a cosmic shooting gallery of rocky visitors from the main asteroid belt.  These objects represent both threat and great promise – a population of potentially hazardous projectiles but also they keys to understanding planetary origins and destinations for future exploration and resource utilization.

Near-Earth asteroids like 2012 DA14 originated from main-belt parents through a complex history of collisional and dynamical processes, delivering to near-Earth space free samples of the fossils of planetary formation.  The asteroids are the battered remains of inner Solar System planetesimals that were the building blocks of the growing terrestrial planets 4.5 billion years ago.  As such, they provide planetary scientists crucial insights into the properties of planet-building materials and the processes that brought them together during that long-ago era.  Meteorites are free samples of these objects, delivered to Earth literally every day.  The mineralogical treasures they contain for meteoriticists attempting to read the pages of Earth’s formative history make some of them worth more than their weight in gold.

So, there is intrinsic, curiosity-driven scientific interest in flybys as close as this one by DA14.  We get the chance to learn a bit more about the properties of some specific asteroids.  What is it shaped like?  Is it a solid fragment of a larger parent asteroid, liberated in a violent impact long ago?  Or is it a pile of rubble, itself battered to bits by impacts with still smaller near-Earth asteroids?  How will Earth’s tidal forces during the flyby affect its spin state, and what might those changes further tell us about its internal structure?  Is there any loose material on its surface, a regolith of impact-fragmented ‘soil’ on this little airless world?  At only some 45 meters across, DA14 lives in that nebulous transition zone between very small asteroid and very large meteoroid – and we still know very little of even the most basic properties of such objects.

But there are very practical reasons for turning our eye to this passing object as well.  This close approach could just as easily have been an impact.  With many tens of thousands of undiscovered objects this size roaming our neighborhood it’s only a matter of time before one of them booms through our atmosphere rather than skating through our planet-circling constellation of satellites.  Rather than playing the odds of time, wouldn’t it be far better to be able to know, with some reasonable certainty, that we’ve cataloged the entire population of potentially hazardous asteroids?  With such a catalog in hand we’d either know we’re safe from disastrous impacts for the foreseeable future or at least be able to plan ahead for any known to be on our near-term cosmic planning calendar.  A happy additional benefit of such a catalog would be to provide a list of the most reachable targets for future robotic and human exploration and for mining the riches of already-in-space mineral resources to help support that exploration.

The B612 Foundation’s Sentinel Mission will play a crucial role in making just such a catalog a reality.  And you can help make it happen!

Dan is the Principal Scientist in the Department of Space Studies of the Southwest Research Institute’s (SwRI) in Boulder, Colorado. He has more than 20 years experience researching the collisional and dynamical evolution of main-belt and near-Earth asteroids, Vulcanoids, Kuiper belt comets, and interplanetary dust. He is an active pilot, with time logged in over a dozen types of aircraft including the F/A-18 Hornet and the F-104 Starfighter, and was a 2004 NASA astronaut selection finalist. Durda is one of three SwRI payload specialists who will fly on multiple suborbital spaceflights on Virgin Galactic’s Enterprise and XCOR Aerospace’s Lynx.

Dan also has an interesting connection to the DA14 story. Up until recently Dan served for over a decade as The Planetary Society’s Shoemaker NEO grant program grants coordinator. Due in part because of a grant from this program, the La Sagra Observatory in Spain discovered 2012 DA14!

Bill Nye the Science Guy talks about DA14

Bill Nye explains the size of the DA14 asteroid that is going to miss earth on February 15, 2012.

Beware of Errant Asteroids

Great op-ed today in the New York Times by Don Yeomans, senior research scientist and the manager of the Near-Earth Object Program Office at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory of NASA, and the author of “Near-Earth Objects: Finding Them Before They Find Us.”

 

NASA: Asteroid flyby next week will be closest for a space rock so large

It’s like Mother Nature sending a warning shot across our bow,” said Don Yeomans, who tracks asteroids for the Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif.

Read more about DA-14, with remarks by Ed, in this today’s article in The Washington Post.

Ed Lu interviewed on NPR Morning Edition

Ed was interviewed on NPR Morning Edition today regarding 2012 DA14. If you missed it on your drive into work, listen online.