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- Path: sparky!uunet!gatech!ncar!noao!amethyst!organpipe.uug.arizona.edu!hindmost!jscotti
- From: jscotti@lpl.arizona.edu (Jim Scotti x2717)
- Newsgroups: sci.astro
- Subject: Re: meteor over Italy = Killer meteorite ?
- Keywords: NEOs, Spaceguard, Meteors, Meteorites
- Message-ID: <1993Jan26.014109.23839@organpipe.uug.arizona.edu>
- Date: 26 Jan 93 01:41:09 GMT
- References: <1993Jan21.233821.17357@news.weeg.uiowa.edu> <93022.124235K3032E0@ALIJKU11.BITNET>
- Sender: news@organpipe.uug.arizona.edu
- Organization: Lunar & Planetary Laboratory, Tucson AZ.
- Lines: 91
-
- In article <93022.124235K3032E0@ALIJKU11.BITNET> K3032E0@ALIJKU11.BITNET writes:
- >
- > [ Stuff about the meteor seen in Europe and the reported deaths
- > possibly caused by a meteorite impact deleted...]
- >
- >Nontheless, I think not even the largest telescopes on earth with the most
- >sensetive CCDs could have detected this small object before it entered the
- >earths atmosphere - not to mention to search for unknown bodies of this
- >size| After all, we are not able to detect most of the much larger near-earth
- >objects.
-
- I beg to differ with you on these points. As a discoverer of many
- Near Earth Objects (NEO's), and as part of the Spacewatch Team which uses
- CCD's and a 0.91 meter (36 inch) telescope, I'd like to comment on this.
- We have discovered and obtained orbits for 3 objects whose estimated sizes
- are under 10-15 meters diameter, and another 5 NEO's whose estimated sizes
- are under about 50 meters diameter. We can (in principle) detect a 5-10
- meter object at 0.01 AU from the Earth and can track them out to 0.04 AU
- or so. We have detected one object in Earth orbit whose brightness,
- if it had been an NEO, would result in an estimated size of just 0.5 meters
- diameter! And we do this with only a 36 inch telescope! Of course, we
- cover a very tiny part of the sky, so the probability of detecting this
- particular object is very small, but they CAN BE DETECTED. Incidentally,
- we detected the Galileo spacecraft when it was 8 million kilometers from
- the Earth!
- As to the second point, we are not able to detect most of the larger
- NEO's only because we do not have resources at the moment to do the search.
- As has been discussed in this group and elsewhere, a modest proposal to
- build 6 telescopes of 2-3 meter aperture and outfit them with mosaics of
- CCD's would allow the nearly complete cataloging of the roughly 2000 NEO's
- larger than 1 km diameter and a sizable sampling of smaller objects in
- only about 20 years time! If the money were allocated now, this survey
- could start now. BTW, this survey has been called the "Spaceguard
- Survey", after such a hypothetical survey described by Arthur C. Clarke
- in "Rendezvous with Rama".
- Spacewatch is working on upgrades which we hope will increase the rate
- discovery of NEO's by about a factor of 5-10 within a few years. We have
- already more or less doubled the discovery rate of a few years ago and
- more efficient techniques and emulsions have almost doubled the rate of
- detection of the photographic observers in the same time as well.
-
- > I suppose some catastrophe like the Tunguska-event, which distroyed
- >a wide area in Siberia in 1908, would happen just as unexpected in our days.
-
- Without more comprehensive sky coverage with state of the art CCD's and
- telescopes, this is still true and is likely to remain true even with a
- system of telescopes described above. In any case, without looking toward
- the daytime side of Earth, you can still get blind-sided be small NEO's
- moving away from perihelion.
-
- >There's not much change (sic) of discovering near-earth-objects a long time before
- >they eventually impact on the surface on earth, if they are discovered at all.
-
- With a fully implemented Spaceguard survey, the largest most globally
- dangerous objects will be detected in less than a lifetime and the orbits
- of those objects will be able to be projected far enough into the future
- to plan, at least on a century timescale, for possible collisions.
-
- >However, impacts which cause major damages don't happen very often, though
- >a few falls in this century could have caused much more damage if they had
- >impacted in more populated areas. Examples are the Sikhote-Aline-meteorite
- >shower, when approx. 100t of iron meteorites rained dowm in 1947, the
- >1.77t Jilin-meteorite (which missed the city of Jilin, China, only by a few
- >kilometers in the 1970's) and, of course, the Tunguska-event.
-
- The Spacewatch discoveries of objects smaller than about 100 meters
- have allowed us to characterize the probability of small objects hitting
- the Earth. We find that objects about 10 meters diameter should hit
- Earth about 1-10 times each year. Fortunately, most of those objects
- will not survive atmospheric entry. Also, it appears that the majority
- of these small objects also have relatively low eccentricity orbits and
- correspondingly lower impact velocities with the Earth.
- Tunguska sized events are probably once per century to once per thousand
- years - remember that the Tunguska impactor is estimated to have been only
- about 50 meters in diameter!
-
- >Don't worry, be happy, and keep looking UP|
- > Herbert
-
- Don't worry - I AM looking UP & hunting for those potentially dangerous
- little beasties!
-
- Jim.
-
- ---------------------------------------------
- Jim Scotti
- {jscotti@lpl.arizona.edu}
- Lunar & Planetary Laboratory
- University of Arizona
- Tucson, AZ 85721 USA
- ---------------------------------------------
-