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    Why Asteroids Make Lousy Space Weapons

    If you lie awake at night worrying about some supervillain steering giant asteroids toward your hometown, you really should relax, experts say. It's not going to happen anytime soon.

    Humanity does indeed have the technical skills to move space rocks around, and we may employ this know-how at some point to avoid a catastrophic impact like the one that killed the dinosaurs 65 million years ago. But the odds of any rogue state using asteroids to rain death down on its enemies are minuscule, experts say.

    "It's a lousy weapon," said former astronaut Rusty Schweickart, chairman of the B612 Foundation, a group dedicated to predicting and preventing cataclysmic asteroid impacts on Earth.

    "You get a chance to use one once every several hundred years," Schweickart said during a recent panel discussion called "Moving an Asteroid" at the California Institute of Technology in Pasadena. "And even then, you can only deflect it to hit someplace along a sort of arbitrary line across the Earth." [Top 10 Space Weapons]

    Serious spaceflight skills

    Changing the orbit of a massive asteroid hurtling through deep space sounds like a daunting task, but our species knows how to do it.

    For example, we could launch a spacecraft that would rendezvous with an asteroid, then travel alongside it for months or years. Over time, the probe's modest gravity would tug on the space rock, pulling it into a different orbit, Schweickart said.

    Given enough time to act, this so-called "gravity tractor" method could work in quite precise and predictable ways. And we've demonstrated the skills necessary to make it happen.

    Multiple missions have met up with asteroids in deep space. For example, NASA's Dawn spacecraft is currently in orbit around Vesta, the second-largest object in the main asteroid belt between Mars and Jupiter.

    And in 2005, Japan's Hayabusa probe rendezvoused with a space rock called Itokawa. The craft even scraped some samples off Itokawa and sent them back to Earth for analysis.

    It's a good thing we possess these potential asteroid-moving skills, Schweickart said, for they may save our bacon someday.

    Earth has been pummeled by many dangerous asteroids throughout its history, and there's no reason to think the barrage will stop in the future. Space rocks big enough to cause major damage and disruption to the global economy and society (were they to strike a populated area today) have hit Earth, on average, every 200 or 300 years, Schweickart said.

    Firing a weapon once every 300 years

    That bombardment rate is scarily frequent to anyone worried about the long-term survival of human civilization. But it's not nearly frequent enough to make asteroids good weapons of mass destruction, according to Schweickart. [5 Reasons to Care About Asteroids]

    "You're going to have an opportunity once every two or three hundred years to go up and have a weapon to hit Baghdad," Schweickart said. "Of course, the problem is that by that time, the Zambian space program is the world's premier space program, and Baghdad is a buddy of yours."

    Potential asteroid wranglers also wouldn't be able to direct a space rock just anywhere on Earth, he added. For the foreseeable future, we'll be able only to speed up or slow down an asteroid, moving it in an "east-west" direction along its trajectory. Moving it in the "north-south" plane is not an option.

    "If you do anything other than speed up or slow down the asteroid, it has almost no effect," Schweickart said. "You've got to go along that line; it's the only way physics lets you do it."

    So anyone wishing to asteroid-bomb the United States would have to manipulate a space rock whose trajectory already crossed American territory. The trick would be tweaking its velocity enough to ensure an impact on American soil.

    In practice, therefore, the wait for a suitable asteroid weapon could be considerably longer than 200 or 300 years.

    Protecting Earth

    Schweickart and other panelists argued that humanity will need to deflect a killer asteroid away from Earth someday. It would be a shame, they said, if unfounded fears about possible nefarious uses of asteroid-moving technology impeded its development.

    "The public perception of asteroids can be pretty scary," Schweickart said. "There's going to be a lot of scare stuff. It's already out there, it's going to get worse and that is going to be a very serious challenge that we on the technical side will have to deal with."

    People worried about death from above should focus their anxiety elsewhere, fellow panelist Bill Nye said. There are plenty of much more viable space weapons than asteroids already up there.

    "Space is already pretty weaponized," said Nye, executive director of the Planetary Society and former host of the science-themed TV show "Bill Nye the Science Guy." "The global positioning system that we all know and love was designed to guide weapons. So using an asteroid as a weapon is sort of coming late to the party."

    You can follow SPACE.com senior writer Mike Wall on Twitter: @michaeldwall. Follow SPACE.com for the latest in space science and exploration news on Twitter @Spacedotcom and on Facebook.

     
    • CarbonBasedLifeForm  •  6 mths ago
      ever read "the Moon is a Hard Mistress" by Robert A Heinlein
      • RJMEmyselfNI 6 mths ago
        At the start of the artical I was going to say that. You beat me to it!
      • Kirstin 6 mths ago
        That was a great book. Mass drivers also appear in Babylon 5 as a generally-banned weapon of mass destruction, and the concept also shows up in "Ender's Game".
      • Wayne W 6 mths ago
        Harsh mistress, not hard. I wish it was available on my kindle. Great book.
    • John Smith  •  6 mths ago
      Amazing, every thing technological, we find a way to get it to kill people. No wonder aliens havent contacted us.
      • Ken L 6 mths ago
        I agree with you and so does George Carlin, check out the skit of his on youtube called George Carlin - Colonizing deep space. It is very funny and so true.
      • MatthewR 6 mths ago
        Actually, this article was about the peaceful uses of space-based technology. In this case, to avoid a catastrophe massive enough to threaten our survival as a species.
      • Glowby 6 mths ago
        Read the article, John. It's got nothing to do with people-killing technology.
    • adrhwrIX  •  6 mths ago
      Just use material from the moon, why hunt down asteroids? You don't even need large objects to launch. Just a heat shield and high velocity will make some really big booms.
    • The Bishop of D...  •  Anaheim, United States  •  6 mths ago
      The obvious use for earth crossing asteroids is as a resource base for space based manufacturing. Why lift materials out of a gravity well when they're already up there? Construction of orbital facilities is an equally obvious application.

      Of course, this approach has an obvious problem: the necessity of being able to think, plan and execute projects that span decades rather than mere budget cycles.
      • Kirstin 6 mths ago
        "Of course, this approach has an obvious problem: the necessity of being able to think, plan and execute projects that span decades rather than mere budget cycles."

        Quoted for truth.
    • john  •  Tampa, United States  •  6 mths ago
      Tell that to the Narns, the Centauri nearly pulverized their planet using mass drivers.
      • JohnL 6 mths ago
        dork. mass drivers are guns that use ammunition. not a a rock flying in space redirected somewhere.
    • Daniel  •  Cincinnati, United States  •  6 mths ago
      Couldn't we feasably use asteriods as some form of transportation as well? Either tethered behind it, or even on it? I don't know it just sounds as if it might be more efficient, and from what I understand asteriods have been out there for a very long time so they are pretty stable too.
    • FSM  •  Charlotte, United States  •  6 mths ago
      Reminds me of a Robert Heinlein story where a moon colony held the earth ransom by threatening to drop rocks on them.
    • Ken  •  Chicago, United States  •  6 mths ago
      I'm glad this article came out I have'nt slept in weeks wondering if some evil doer was going to end life as we know with an asteriod
    • brainsaladsurgery  •  6 mths ago
      Darkseid
    • Danial  •  Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia  •  6 mths ago
      LOL "baghdad is a buddy of yours". cheers for world peace!!!
    • T  •  6 mths ago
      Stupid Article - nobody was sitting around thinking about using an asteroid as a weapon. We already have innumerable ways to kill each other on a massive scale.
    • JeffS  •  St. Louis, United States  •  6 mths ago
      Anubis aimed an asteroid at Earth, but then again he was half Ancient, so for him it was easy.
    • .  •  6 mths ago
      Well, it worked pretty well for the bug planet of Klendathu. They toasted over 11 Million Terrans and wiped out Buenos Aires. Just because in our own ignorace it's not possible for us to accelerate and calculate the trajectories for asteroids through hundreds of millions of miles of space let alone our own solar system doesn't mean someone else can't do it. Bogus article and bugs rule!
    • SeerOfDreams  •  Derry, United States  •  6 mths ago
      "For example, we could launch a spacecraft that would rendezvous with an asteroid, then travel alongside it for months or years. Over time, the probe's modest gravity would tug on the space rock, pulling it into a different orbit, Schweickart said."
      I would think it more likely that the relatively huge mass of an asteroid would pull the little spacecraft instead of the other way around.
      But what do I know. I'm just the guy fleeing Rio ahead of the bug-fired asteroid.
    • Harold  •  6 mths ago
      need to drop one on India and China to curb the world overpopulation !!!!!!
    • michael  •  6 mths ago
      the lies are at it again. Large space rocks go by every few years between the earths orbit and the moon, thousands go by outside that orbit which could be steered into hitting the earth. So the 200 or 300 year figure is just a lie. The first country to build a real nuclear powered space fleet will own the earth, that is problably going to be China so learn Chinese.
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