1 / 27

Don Yeomans NASA/JPL

Near-Earth Objects Finding Them Before They Find Us. Don Yeomans NASA/JPL. 2. What are Near-Earth Objects?. Comet Hartley 2, Nov. 4, 2010. Comets (Weak and very black icy dirt balls) Weak collection of talcum-powder sized silicate dust

rayya
Download Presentation

Don Yeomans NASA/JPL

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Near-Earth Objects Finding Them Before They Find Us Don Yeomans NASA/JPL

  2. 2 What are Near-Earth Objects? Comet Hartley 2, Nov. 4, 2010 • Comets (Weak and very black icy dirt balls) • Weak collection of talcum-powder sized silicate dust • About 30% ices (mostly water ice) just below surface dust. CO2 ices also present further below surface. • Fairly recent resurfacing and few impact craters • Asteroids (run the gamut from wimpy ex-comet fluff balls to slabs of iron • Most are shattered fragments of larger asteroids • Rubble rock piles - like Itokawa • Shattered (but coherent) rock - like Eros • Solid rock • Solid slabs of iron like Meteor crater object Itokawa Itokawa

  3. 1800 1800 3 History of Known NEO Population Earth Crossing Outside Earth’s Orbit Armagh Observatory

  4. 1800 1800 1900 4 History of Known NEO Population Earth Crossing Outside Earth’s Orbit Armagh Observatory

  5. 1800 1800 1900 1950 5 History of Known NEO Population Earth Crossing Outside Earth’s Orbit Armagh Observatory

  6. 1800 1800 1900 1950 1990 6 History of Known NEO Population Earth Crossing Outside Earth’s Orbit Armagh Observatory

  7. 1800 1800 1900 1950 1990 1999 7 History of Known NEO Population Earth Crossing Outside Earth’s Orbit Armagh Observatory

  8. 2012 The Inner Solar System in 2006 • Known • 600,000 • minor planets • 9450 NEOs • 1350 PHAs 1800 1800 1900 1950 1990 1999 Scott Manley 8 History of Known NEO Population Earth Crossing Outside Earth’s Orbit Armagh Observatory

  9. 9 The Importance of Near-Earth Asteroids • Science • Future Space Resources • Exploration • Planetary Defense

  10. 10

  11. 11 Human Accessible Targets

  12. 12 JPL’s SENTY NEO Risk Page http://neo.jpl.nasa.gov/risk/

  13. LINEAR 13 NASA’s NEO Observation Program NEO-WISE Pan-STARRS Catalina Sky Survey

  14. Radar Studies 14 Goldstone, CA Arecibo, Puerto Rico Study of Shape, Size, Motion and mass of near-Earth object 66391 (1999 KW4) Shape, Size of 6489 Golevka

  15. 15 NASA’s NEO Program Office at JPL • Automatic orbit updates • Are any of the NEOs a threat? • Relational database • Study deflection strategies • Additional Information • Impact warnings & outreach • http://www.jpl.nasa.gov/asteroidwatch/ • Widget available giving next 5 Earth close approaches • NEO Program Office: http://neo.jpl.nasa.gov/

  16. 16 Recent NEO Program Office Activities • Human Exploration Target Body Identification • Which NEAs are desirable RT mission targets? • When are they next observable (optical & radar)? • Deflection mission study for asteroid 2011 AG5 IP = 1/500 for Feb. 5, 2040 • Educational site for designing asteroid deflection missions.

  17. 17 2011 AG5

  18. 18

  19. 19

  20. 20 Near-Earth Asteroid Apophis Predicted Close Approach of Apophis (~270m Object) on April 13, 2029 CLOSE-UP VIEW Geosynchronous Orbit

  21. 21 Near-Earth Asteroid 2012 DA14 in Feb. 2013

  22. 22

  23. 23 Asteroid 2012 DA14 February 15, 2013 2012 DA14

  24. 24 Deep ImpactComet Tempel 1 on July 4, 2005

  25. 25 Comet ISON

  26. 26 Observing Comet ISON

  27. 27

More Related