Franklin
District
Astronomers
Society
Links
Whats Happening
About the club
Photos
Contacts
Other Sociteys
Calender
|
Whats Happening
Astroid
Alert
Recognizing the public interest
and concern over possible impacts from small Near-Earth
Asteroids (NEAs), the International Astronomical Union
has established a process to provide international expert
review of any
discoveries or calculations that predict a close
encounter with a non-neglibible chance of future impact.
This review process has been exercised to confirm the
calculations, based on current observations, of a close
encounter with a low probability of impact on 21
September 2030 by a
very small asteroid-like object, designated 2000 SG344.
Computations made earlier this week by a group of
international experts suggest that the object 2000 SG344,
has a remote 1 in 500 chance of impacting the Earth in
2030. These results have been verified over the
course of the past 72 hours by a Technical Review Team of
the International Astronomical Union. The greatest
likelihood is that future observations of the object will
yield higher precision orbit computations that will show
with certainty that it will miss the Earth entirely. The
unusual nature of the orbit of 2000 SG344 suggests the
possibility that it might simply be a man-made rocket
booster from the Apollo era.
Object 2000 SG344 was discovered on September 29, 2000 by
David J. Tholen and Robert J. Whiteley using the Canada-France-Hawaii
3.6-meter aperture telescope on the island of Hawaii.
Shortly thereafter, pre-discovery
observations taken in May 1999 by MIT's LINEAR
observatory team were also identified. Given the observed
brightness of the object and its assumed reflectivity, an
estimate can be made for its diameter. While the
reflectivity of this object is not known, values typical
for near-Earth asteroids imply this object's extent is
about 30 - 70 meters.
Orbital calculations in late October by Andrea Milani (University
of Pisa, Italy) first indicated the possibility of a
future impact. Paul Chodas of the Near-Earth Object
Program Office at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory
estimates a one in 500 chance of the object hitting the
Earth on September 21, 2030. The possibility of an Earth
impacting orbit was confirmed by Steven Chesley (NASA/JPL),
Giovanni Valsecchi (Italian National Research
Center in Rome, Italy) and Karri Muinonen (University of
Helsinki). If the object is near the large end of the
estimated size range for an asteroid, it would be
classified as category 1 within the 10 point Torino
Scale,
meaning the object is one that merits careful monitoring.
If the object's size is closer to the lower limit of 30
meters, it would be classified as Torino Scale 0 and
hence not of immediate concern.
Because the orbital period of this object about the sun
is 354 days, it moves a bit faster than the Earth about
the Sun so it is drifting slowly away and will not return
to the Earth's neighborhood until nearly three decades.
It was last in the Earth's neighborhood in 1971. As yet
undiscovered pre-discovery observations made in 1971 and
additional observations made in the coming months would
provide the data for further refining this object's orbit
and the circumstances of its close Earth approach in 2030.
During the 2030 close approach, the perturbative effects
of the Earth upon the object could change its orbital
period so that umerous encounters might be possible after
2030. The likelihood of this situation is also under
study.
Because of its Earth-like orbit, this object is an
obvious candidate for being a left-over space probe or
rocket stage. For example, the S-IVB stages of the five
Apollo rockets (Apollo 8-12) entered into heliocentric
orbits that are similar to the orbit of object 2000 SG344.
If this object is a man-made rocket booster, it would
have a higher reflectivity than a natural asteroid and
hence it would have to be smaller (about 15 meters) to
reflect as much light as a much darker asteroid. While
object 2000 SG344 seems too bright to be an Apollo rocket
booster, the possibility of its being man-made has not
been completely ruled out.
While object 2000 SG344 will likely pass close to the
Earth in 2030, it should be made clear that the
probability of the object missing the Earth is at least
500 to 1. If the ongoing studies determine that this
object is likely to be a relatively small man-made
booster then such a lightweight
object would pose no hazard. It is interesting to note
the chance of object 2000 SG344 striking the Earth in
2030 is actually somewhat less than the chance of an
undiscovered object of the same size striking the Earth
in any given year. Thus object 2000 SG344 is more
interesting than threatening but the international
efforts to characterize the nature and future motion of
this object will continue.
In line with its policy decisions, the IAU does not
intend to make any further statements on the eventuality
of an impact by 2000 SG344, leaving that to the
individual scientists who are observing this interesting
small
asteroid and computing its orbit.
|