Author Topic: Red Tape Hinders Study of Asteroid Impacts on Earth  (Read 710 times)

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

Online Buster's Uncle

  • Geo's kind, I unwind, HE'S the
  • Planetary Overmind
  • *
  • Posts: 50907
  • €162
  • View Inventory
  • Send /Gift
  • Because there are times when people just need a cute puppy  Soft kitty, warm kitty, little ball of fur  A WONDERFUL concept, Unity - & a 1-way trip that cost 400 trillion & 40 yrs.  
  • AC2 is my instrument, my heart, as I play my song.
  • Planet tales writer Smilie Artist Custom Faction Modder AC2 Wiki contributor Downloads Contributor
    • View Profile
    • My Custom Factions
    • Awards
Red Tape Hinders Study of Asteroid Impacts on Earth
« on: April 21, 2014, 09:38:30 pm »
Red Tape Hinders Study of Asteroid Impacts on Earth
SPACE.com
by Leonard David, SPACE.com's Space Insider Columnist  9 hours ago



Artist's view of last year’s fireball explosion over Chelyabinsk, Russia – termed a "superbolide" event.



Red tape is making it tougher for researchers to study and characterize asteroid strikes on Earth, which are apparently more common than previously thought, experts say.

The bureaucratic snafu affects the use of U.S. government space assets that help scientists study "airbursts" like the meteor that exploded without warning over Russia last year. At issue is the ability to combine space data with outputs from a global network of seismic, infrasound and hydroacoustic sensors that have been deployed worldwide to provide treaty verification for a nuclear test ban.

This network is the International Monitoring System (IMS) overseen by the Comprehensive Nuclear Test Ban Treaty Organization (CTBTO).

In recent years, the IMS has detected shock waves from many airbursts, providing further evidence that asteroid impacts are more frequent than previously thought.

Ideally, matching observations from spacecraft with measurements from CTBTOs infrasound detectors would give scientists more of a heads-up on what's raining down on Earth, experts say.


Memorandum of agreement

Last year, the Air Force Space Command signed a memorandum of agreement with NASA's Science Mission Directorate.

That document, inked on Jan. 18, 2013, spelled out specifics for the public release of meteor data from sources such as high-flying, secretive U.S. government space sensors.

With that agreement in place, NASA's Near Earth Object (NEO) Observation Program started receiving information on fireball events based on analysis of data collected by U.S. government sensors.

Details of atmospheric meteor explosions, as recorded by U.S. military spacecraft sensors, were posted on a publicly accessible NASA website run by the Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) in Pasadena, Calif.

In fact, the military-civil cooperation was spurred by the details of the February 2013 fireball explosion over Chelyabinsk, Russia — termed a "superbolide" event. The website postings are designed to assist the scientific community's investigation of bolides, or exceptionally bright fireballs.



The International Monitoring System overseen by the Comprehensive Nuclear Test Ban Treaty Organization includes infrasound stations that detect low-frequency airwaves from bolides.


However, multiple scientists noted that the JPL website had not been updated recently. That presumably meant that there was some sort of delay, as some fairly big events were detected by infrasound in the last year.


Workforce issue

"Because of budget and personnel reductions on our military partner, they ran into workforce issues to accomplish this task," said Lindley Johnson, NEO program executive within the Planetary Science Division of NASA's Science Mission Directorate in Washington, D.C.

"We are already in discussions with them about what it will take to get it restarted," Johnson told Space.com.

Taking personnel off a task of providing useful science data from meteor events could be seen as a cost-saver. But Clark Chapman, asteroid expert at the Southwest Research Institute in Boulder, Colo., questions how much money could actually be saved by these cutbacks.

"There aren't that many events," Chapman told Space.com, "so it is difficult for me to imagine that it would take any major part of one person's time to alert the public and scientific community to the detected bolides."

Chapman said that use of the U.S. military-gleaned data "is a vital resource to the scientific community." That data provides information about the actual rates of such events, which can be tough to gauge.

"But I am not privy to what has to be done on the inside to release this information," Chapman said. He hopes that NASA is successful in encouraging the military "to resume this small but important activity."


Renaissance in global detection

Since its inception in the mid-1990s, data from the International Monitoring System of the CTBTO has led to a renaissance in the global detection of low-frequency airwaves (infrasound) from bolides, said Peter Brown, director of the Center for Planetary Science and Exploration at the University of Western Ontario in Canada.

"The value of infrasonic bolide detection is the ability to monitor all parts of the globe, particularly the oceans, for airbursts and provide an estimate of their location and origin time," Brown told Space.com.

With some additional signal processing and comparison with other explosive events in Earth's atmosphere having known source energies, Brown said that CTBTO infrasound airburst energies are now routinely computed and have been found to be robust over many orders of magnitude.

"The current IMS network consists of over 40 infrasound stations, making global monitoring for events as small as 1 kiloton relatively complete," Brown said. "As the network continues to expand and new, automated processing techniques are applied to IMS infrasound data, I expect more airburst events to be identified even sooner after they occur."


More common than thought

Data from the nuclear weapons test warning network, supplied by Brown, will be showcased on Earth Day (April 22) during a B612 Foundation news conference at the Seattle Museum of Flight. A new video will show multiple atomic-bomb-scale asteroid impacts on Earth since 2001.

The nonprofit B612 Foundation is partnering with Ball Aerospace on the infrared Sentinel Space Telescope. From a Venus-like orbit around the sun, Sentinel is designed to find and track asteroids, some of which might hit Earth.

According to former astronaut Ed Lu, CEO of the B612 Foundation, the video shows that asteroid impacts are actually three to 10 times more common than previously thought.

"The fact that none of these asteroid impacts shown in the video was detected in advance is proof that the only thing preventing a catastrophe from a city-killer-sized asteroid is blind luck," Lu said in a statement.


http://news.yahoo.com/red-tape-hinders-study-asteroid-impacts-earth-110132502.html

 

* User

Welcome, Guest. Please login or register.
Did you miss your activation email?


Login with username, password and session length

Select language:

* Community poll

SMAC v.4 SMAX v.2 (or previous versions)
-=-
24 (7%)
XP Compatibility patch
-=-
9 (2%)
Gog version for Windows
-=-
105 (33%)
Scient (unofficial) patch
-=-
40 (12%)
Kyrub's latest patch
-=-
14 (4%)
Yitzi's latest patch
-=-
89 (28%)
AC for Mac
-=-
3 (0%)
AC for Linux
-=-
5 (1%)
Gog version for Mac
-=-
10 (3%)
No patch
-=-
16 (5%)
Total Members Voted: 315
AC2 Wiki Logo
-click pic for wik-

* Random quote

When beholding the tranquil beauty and brilliancy of the ocean's skin, one forgets the tiger heart that pants beneath it; and would not willingly remember that this velvet paw but conceals a remorseless fang.
~Herman Melville, ‘Moby Dick’, Datalinks

* Select your theme

*
Templates: 5: index (default), PortaMx/Mainindex (default), PortaMx/Frames (default), Display (default), GenericControls (default).
Sub templates: 8: init, html_above, body_above, portamx_above, main, portamx_below, body_below, html_below.
Language files: 4: index+Modifications.english (default), TopicRating/.english (default), PortaMx/PortaMx.english (default), OharaYTEmbed.english (default).
Style sheets: 0: .
Files included: 45 - 1228KB. (show)
Queries used: 36.

[Show Queries]