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<text id=93TT2380>
<title>
Feb. 01, 1993: Look Out!
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
Feb. 01, 1993 Clinton's First Blunder
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
SCIENCE, Page 56
Look Out!
</hdr>
<body>
<p>Scientists call for a system of telescopes and missiles to avert
disastrous impacts by asteroids and comets
</p>
<p>By LEON JAROFF
</p>
<p> The fossil record is clear. Time and again during the
nearly 4 billion years that life has existed on Earth, it has
been assailed by global catastrophes that have caused the
wholesale extinction of animals and plants. Over the past decade
evidence has been mounting that many of these calamities were
caused not by long-term climatic changes, volcanism or disease,
but by large asteroids or comets smashing into Earth.
</p>
<p> These impacts blasted enough dust into the atmosphere to
shroud the entire globe for months on end, blocking sunlight and
causing temperatures to plummet. In the cold and dark, plants
and animals perished. Compelling evidence of such cataclysms was
revealed last summer: scientists confirmed that a giant crater,
176 km (110 miles) across, discovered under the northern tip of
Mexico's Yucatan Peninsula was the likely impact point of a huge
object, probably a comet, believed to have wiped out the
dinosaurs and other forms of life 65 million years ago.
</p>
<p> Could such mass extinctions happen again? Astronomers have
no doubt; the solar system is littered with flying debris, and
they say it is only a matter of time before another large
celestial object bears down on Earth. Reminders of that
potential for disaster occur frequently. Early in January, for
example, NASA released several radar images of the 6.4-km-long
(4-mile) dumbbell-shaped asteroid Toutatis taken when it sped
within 3.5 million km (2.2 million miles) of Earth--a
hairbreadth by astronomical standards. And while the warning
that the 10-km-wide (6-mile) Comet Swift-Tuttle might slam into
Earth in 2126 has now been retracted, it briefly caused genuine
concern among many scientists.
</p>
<p> But life on Earth may no longer have to wait helplessly
for the next catastrophe. In a paper titled "Cosmic
Bombardment," scientists at Lawrence Livermore National
Laboratory declare that "terrestrial life now has a
representative (mankind) capable of actively defending it from
the bombardment--after four eons of simply enduring it."
</p>
<p> The defense that scientists have in mind involves a
contemporary version of beating swords into plowshares: using
Star Wars technology and rockets to benefit humanity. How? By
spotting and then deflecting or destroying threatening asteroids
or comets before they can hit Earth. That is the recommendation
of two NASA-sponsored workshops, one that proposed detection
techniques for identifying incoming objects, another that
recommended ways of intercepting and dealing with them. While
the proposals have the ring of science fiction, they are closer
to reality than most people realize; the workshops were
authorized by Congress.
</p>
<p> Scientists at the detection workshop focused on what they
called "the greatest risk"--the possibility of impact by
asteroids with diameters larger than 1 km (3,300 ft.) and impact
energies ranging from 100,000 to many millions of megatons,
blasts that would have global effects. Though astronomers have
found 100 or so of these hulks that can pass through Earth's
orbit--and that might someday pose a threat--they estimate
that there are some 2,000 large "Earth-crossing" asteroids
(ECAs) still awaiting discovery.
</p>
<p> To hunt down these objects, the workshop proposed the
construction of six 2.5-m (98-in.) telescopes, three located in
the northern and three in the southern hemisphere. Each would
be equipped with advanced versions of the charge-coupled device,
a kind of electronic camera, already being used by Tom Gehrels,
a University of Arizona astronomer who heads one of three U.S.
teams independently searching for asteroids. The CCDs, which
record electronic images of celestial objects, would feed into
computers that could speedily identify and track asteroids and
comets against the background of fixed stars. "It's the right
time to do it," says David Morrison, the nasa scientist who
chaired the detection workshop. "If we had proposed this project
10 or 15 years ago and tried to do it with photography, it would
have been completely impossible."
</p>
<p> A continuing survey with the new telescopes, the panel
predicted, would discover most of the large Earth-crossers
within a decade, and virtually all of them in 25 years. And
while the survey was hunting its larger prey, it would also spot
many of the estimated 300,000 ECAs larger than 100 m (330 ft.),
which could cause regional, but not global, disaster. One
proposal, to use orbiting sensors and lasers for detecting
smaller objects, was rejected by the panel as unneeded,
prohibitively expensive and probably futile. Astronomer Gehrels
estimates that 100 million asteroids larger than 20 m in
diameter are on paths that can cross Earth's orbit. "So," he
says "There is no way in the foreseeable future you could detect
all of these objects."
</p>
<p> Proceedings at the interception workshop were tumultuous.
But there was general agreement about the basic strategy:
detect the threatening object and dispatch a warhead-tipped
rocket to intercept it and explode, nudging it into a new orbit
that would carry it safely past Earth. For a small asteroid
detected years and many orbits before its destined collision,
the solution would be straightforward. "You apply some modest
impulse to it at its perihelion, or closest point to the sun,
using conventional explosives," explains Gregory Canavan, a
senior scientist at Los Alamos National Laboratory. "The slight
deflection that results will amplify during each orbit, ensuring
that the asteroid misses Earth by a wide margin."
</p>
<p> But scientists calculate that for objects having diameters
of 100 m or more that are spotted late in the game and
intercepted at a distance any closer than about 150 million km
(93 million miles), only nuclear explosives pack enough wallop
to avert disaster. At that distance, the energy needed to
deflect a 2-km-wide (1 1/4-mile) object enough to spare Earth
is about the equivalent of a 1-megaton nuclear explosion. If the
object gets to about a tenth of that distance, the energy
required is 100 megatons, more powerful than any nuclear device
yet exploded.
</p>
<p> More likely than not, a threatening asteroid of that size
would be spotted earlier. But so-called long-period comets
(those making their first appearance or returning at intervals
of greater than 200 years) are another matter. Appearing without
warning as they streak in from the outer reaches of the solar
system, they usually become visible to astronomers only from a
few months to two years before passing Earth. Should one
suddenly appear on a collision course, traveling as fast as
217,000 km/h (135,000 m.p.h.) relative to Earth, defenders would
not have the luxury of years of observation and of using a small
explosion to deflect it. A quick nuclear bang would be needed.
</p>
<p> Still, the very notion of having high-megaton missiles at
the ready, either on Earth or in orbit, was unsettling to many
at the workshop, who feared that they could be turned against
fellow humans rather than cosmic interlopers. They simply "did
not want to talk about very large amounts of energy," says
Canavan. "And therefore they wanted to ignore the problem." Some
suggested heatedly, in leaks to the press, that pro-nuclear Star
Wars scientists, frustrated by the down-sizing of their
projects, were using the asteroid and comet threat as an excuse
for revitalizing their jobs.
</p>
<p> Less controversial was the proposal that terrestrial
defenders should know the exact nature of their target before
acting. Responding early to a worrisome asteroid, they would
send a "precursor mission," an instrumented spacecraft, to fly
by or orbit the object and determine its size, shape and
composition. One such "practice" mission, code-named Clementine,
has already been budgeted by the Defense Department in
coordination with NASA. It will fly an instrument package past
the approaching asteroid Geographos in 1994 to test the kind of
sensors and navigational devices that someday may be needed to
help cope with a real threat.
</p>
<p> Once the nature of the approaching object is determined,
explains physicist Edward Tagliaferri, a U.S. space program
consultant, "it becomes easier to decide if you want a standoff
explosion, a surface explosion or a subsurface explosion," If
the asteroid or comet is small, it can be vaporized with a
subsurface explosion, but for larger bodies, says Tagliaferri,
"you'll probably have to nudge them into a new orbit." For an
asteroid consisting largely of iron, he says, "you'd probably
want to have a surface explosion to do the job."
</p>
<p> In attacking a large comet or stony asteroid, however, the
interceptors would have to take care not to blast their quarry
into many large chunks, each of which would be a potential city
killer. One way of avoiding that, workshop scientists suggested,
is to use the neutron bomb, a weapon that delivers most of its
energy in the form of speeding neutrons rather than an
explosive blast. The neutron warhead would be detonated when the
missile approached to about a distance equal to the radius of
the asteroid. "The neutrons penetrate deeply into the near side
of the asteroid," Canavan explains. "They heat and vaporize the
material, which expands at a high velocity and blows out of the
side of the asteroid," thrusting it into a new, non-threatening
orbit.
</p>
<p> What about costs? The price list submitted by the
workshops included $50 million for the telescope network and $10
million to $15 million annually to operate it. Adding research
on defense technologies and possible space-based sensors would
run the annual costs to "a few tens of millions." And "a few
hundred million dollars could develop and test the robotic
spacecraft missions" needed to scout any threatening object. An
effective way of reducing later costs, says Eugene Shoemaker of
the U.S. Geological Survey, would be to put aside a handful of
the missiles now being dismantled by the U.S. and Russia and
modify them for the intercept program. "It's not huge bucks,"
he says.
</p>
<p> Antinuclear, anti-Star Wars scientists were not reassured.
Some campaigned through last summer against even the mention of
any nuclear deterrence in the final draft of the interception
workshop's report. Then came word of Comet Swift-Tuttle.
"Nothing so clears the mind as the sight of the gallows," quips
Canavan, who oversaw the final report. "Even though Swift-Tuttle
turned out to be a false alarm," he says, "it brought everyone's
thinking into focus. There was no longer the kind of
disagreement you saw earlier about nukes versus non-nukes."
Compromises were made, and the long-delayed interception report
was finally distributed in November.
</p>
<p> How will Congress respond to the NASA proposals? "There
was a high giggle factor when they first heard about it," says
a congressional aide. No longer. California's George Brown,
chairman of the House Science, Space and Technology Committee,
is convinced that "a significant possibility of an impact exists
that would have major consequences" and that "we can do
something about it. It can't be some hare-brained scheme that
would cost umpteen billion dollars for an immediate mission,"
he stresses, "but we can do all of the precursor planning and
prepare the kind of launch vehicle necessary to do the job."
Brown's words carry weight; he will preside over hearings on the
subject during the current session of Congress.
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>