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By Jonathan Leake in London
NASA is drawing up a shortlist of ideas, to be unveiled
early next year, for diverting a 40 million tonne asteroid on course to
pass dangerously close to Earth.
Fears that
the planet may be in danger from being struck by asteroids were
heightened by the discovery of one orbiting the sun that, on its
present path, will pass within 35,405km - a hair's breadth in
astronomical terms - in April 2029.
NASA's plan is to engineer a minor shift in the asteroid's
trajectory that would make it miss Earth by a wider margin on this and
all subsequent passes.
Under one possible plan, a robotic craft would be sent to the
asteroid to attempt to alter its course. One option might be to install
a propulsion system on the surface to nudge it onto a new course.
The schemes will be presented and discussed at the annual meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science.
The studies follow the discovery of hundreds of small asteroids
orbiting the sun that repeatedly cross Earth's orbit, raising the
possibility of a devastating collision.
The one causing most concern is a rock of more than 304m called
Apophis, the Greek name for the Egyptian god Apep, known as "the
destroyer". It will come so close to Earth it will pass under many
satellites and may destroy some.
Astronomers fear that although 2029 should pass without incident,
coming so close to Earth might change Apophis's 323-day orbit around
the sun - during which it crosses the planet's path twice - creating an
even bigger risk in the future. A second close encounter is predicted
for 2036.
http://www.news.com.au/story/0,23599,20973995-401,00.html
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