New Study: Nuking Asteroid Would Stop 99% Of It Hitting Earth

Firing a nuclear warhead at a small asteroid on a collision course with the Earth could stop 99 percent of it from hitting the planet, according to a new study.

New research indicates that if a small asteroid were headed to collide with the earth, causing the loss of numerous lives, a nuclear warhead detonated near the asteroid in space could conceivably prevent 99% of the asteroid from hitting the planet, unlike previous estimates that asserted large parts of the asteroid would plunge to the planet.

Researchers from Johns Hopkins University and Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory wrote in the abstract for their paper, “Diverting hazardous small bodies on impact trajectories with the Earth can in some circumstances be impossible without risking disrupting them. Disruption is a much more difficult planetary defense scenario to assess, being linked both to the response of the body to shock loading and the much more complicated gravitational dynamics of the fragments in the solar system relative to pure deflection scenarios. … We find that disruption can be a very effective planetary defense strategy even for very late (sub-year) interventions, and should be considered an effective backup strategy should preferred methods, which require long warning times, fail.”

“The Center for Near Earth Object Studies at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory runs an asteroid impact simulation once every two years. The exercise from earlier this year was unique in that the fictional threatening asteroid, dubbed ‘2021 PDC,’ was detected just six months before its scheduled meeting with Earth’s surface. It was deemed an insufficient amount of time to deploy a mitigation strategy, so the participants focused primarily on disaster response,” Gizmodo explained.

The leader of the study, physicist Patrick King from Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory, told Gizmodo:

Simply stated, for a 100-meter object that’s projected to hit Earth, if we employ a robust nuclear disruption technique by at least one month before impact, we can prevent 99% or more of the impacting mass from hitting the Earth. …

We employed several approximations in order to make the study feasible, but we believe that we have captured the essential physics necessary to make general observations about nuclear disruption as a technique. Much of our uncertainty is driven by our inherent uncertainty in the properties of the asteroids themselves; we definitely need to support more space missions to investigate their properties in more detail. …

By making several fragments instead of one single impactor, it is possible that we multiply the threat. On the other


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