Posted Mar 07, 2007 at 02:00AM by Glen D. Listed in: News, Astronomy, NASA Tags: NASA, Congress, John Logsdon, infrared, Pacific Ocean
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asteroid - Image 1Here's the old bad news" Killer asteroids and comets are lurking stealthily in our solar system. There are about 20,000 of them which pose a threat to our lives. The good news is that NASA says it can detect these space monsters and devise a plan to save life on Earth as we know it.

Here's the new bad news: Washington says that even if NASA reduces its proposed budget by 70 percent, the answer is still no and the plan is denied the funding necessary to save us all. It leaves NASA - and the rest of the world - sightless to defend itself. Simon "Pete" Worden, director of NASA's Ames Research Center said "We know what to do, we just don't have the money."

After reports rattled the world of an asteroid which may hit the Pacific ocean in 2008 were released and debunked, the U.S. congress ordered NASA to devise a way to track down such threats and propose a way to avoid a catastrophe. NASA did just that, and the budget proposed rings to the tune of one billion dollars.

Asteroids that measure 460 feet in diameter are considered threats. To contextualize just what kind of horrors can happen if one enters the atmosphere, NASA had this to say:

Even if the asteroid burns up and shatter to pieces in the atmosphere, the particles raining down can obliterate a small American state like Maryland. If it hits the ocean, colossal tidal waves will follow, and if it's big enough to land intact for deep impact, the blast can rival the one that supposedly wiped the dinosaurs from the face of the Earth.


The best and fastest way to track asteroids is through a space infrared telescope which will cost about 1.1 billion dollars. A cheaper 800-million dollar solution is to mount a new telescope to one of NASA's existing telescopes. The cheapest is to cooperate with other agencies around the world and mount the new telescope into one of theirs. That would bring the cost down to 300-million dollars.

Washington, however, still says that all the solutions are too costly. John Logsdon, space policy director at George Washington University emphasized the need to keep track of these space-based threats and concluded "you can't deflect them if you can't find them."


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3 Comments


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   by ... (Unregistered) - 2007-03-07
 » wtf

so we are screwed if an asteroid collides earth tomorrow.
hopes it doesnt.
maybe it will...
thats what we never know
but you'll sure remember what I said
about an asteroid tomorrow
am not saying its gonna happen
but its just an advice

   by Advertising -
   by SOMEONE (Unregistered) - 2007-03-07
 » n00bs

it's as cheap as hell damn it! i would pay all the money in the world just to save MY life... imagine how nuch i would pay to save EVERYONE's lives! they are n00bs!!!

   by wtf (Unregistered) - 2007-03-08
 » ya rly

so what this article is saying is that there are some people who would rather let the entire world die, including themselves, rather than spend some money to prevent it? that just doesn't make sense....



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