SETI Live: Asteroid Deflection via Nuclear Blasts

SETI Live

Tags: SETI Live, Comets, Meteors, and Asteroids

Time: Thursday, Dec 05, 2024 -

Location: online

Background photo by Bryan Goff on Unsplash

A Simulated Planetary Defense Experiment from Sandia Labs

Imagine that scene from every apocalyptic asteroid movie—you know the one. The scientist comes rushing in because a "new" asteroid has been detected and is on a collision course with Earth. What happens next? The answer depends on several factors: how big is the asteroid, what is it made of, and how soon is the impact? (That's simplified but roll with it.) NASA's DART mission showed that an impactor can change the orbit of an asteroid, but that tested the hypothesis on the tiny moon of a small asteroid. What if the asteroid is much larger? Scientists at Sandia National Laboratories in New Mexico may have an answer -- a controlled nuclear blast that deflects (rather than destroys) the asteroid.

Join planetary scientist Beth Johnson and lead author Nathan Moore for an exciting—and probably terrifying—conversation about how to keep our advanced civilization alive.

Press release: https://newsreleases.sandia.gov/asteroid_deflection/

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