[Newspoetry] Asteroid nears Earth, gets a close look, speeds away

Robert Porter bwp61 at ix.netcom.com
Fri Jun 21 10:56:05 CDT 2002


For the Editor-within-Chief, who likes to keep track of these things:

June 21, 2002

Scientists: Asteroid Passed Earth
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Filed at 3:41 a.m. ET

LONDON (AP) -- An asteroid the size of a football field hurtled past the
Earth a week ago, missing what could have been a catastrophic collision by a
mere 75,000 miles -- less than a third of the distance to the moon.

The miss was one of the nearest ever recorded for an object of that size,
scientists said Thursday. ``It was a close shave,'' said Brian Marsden of
the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics in Cambridge, Mass.

The asteroid would have caused ``considerable loss of life'' if it had
struck Earth in a populated area, said Grant Stokes, the principal
investigator for the Lincoln Near Earth Asteroid Research Project, whose New
Mexico observatory spotted the object last week.

``The energy release would be of the magnitude of a large nuclear weapon,''
Stokes said.

``Looking statistically at the asteroid population, maybe 50 times a year a
100-meter-class asteroid passes within a lunar distance of Earth,'' Stokes
said. ``But only a handful of such asteroids that have penetrated the Moon's
orbit have been spotted by asteroid search programs.''

Benny Peiser, an expert on near earth objects at Liverpool John Moore's
University in England, said that most asteroids do not come so close, but
noted the latest ``reminder'' comes as Britain tests telescopes on the
Spanish island of La Palma to search for the objects.

``Such near misses do highlight the importance of detecting these objects,''
he said.

Currently, there is no program dedicated to searching for objects of 2002
MN's size. NASA concentrates its efforts on bodies bigger than .62 miles
across, which would cause worse devastation.

``NASA has a goal of discovering and obtaining good orbits for all the near
earth objects with diameters larger than 1 kilometer,'' said Thomas Morgan,
a scientist at NASA headquarters in Washington. ``Asteroids of this size
could potentially destroy civilization as we know it.''

Such asteroids could theoretically hit Earth every million years, or at
longer intervals.

Asteroids the size of 2002 MN are estimated to hit the Earth every 100 to
several hundred years, causing local damage but no disaster to civilization
or the planet's ecosystem, Stokes said.

``It's something the public should know about, but shouldn't get nervous
about,'' he said. ``Civilization has to get used to them on some level.''

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