Artist concept of a space tug. Credit: NASA |
Apollo 9
astronaut Rusty Schweickart is among an international group of people
championing the need for the human race to prepare for what will
certainly happen one day: an asteroid threat to Earth. In an article on Universe Today published yesterday,
Schweickart said the technology is available today to send a mission to
an asteroid in an attempt to move it, or change its orbit so that an
asteroid that threatens to hit Earth will pass by harmlessly. What
would such a mission entail?
In a phone interview, Schweickart described two types of “deflection
campaigns” for a threatening asteroid: a kinetic impact would roughly
“push” the asteroid into a different orbit, and a gravity tractor would
“tug slowly” on the asteroid to precisely “trim” the resultant change
course by using nothing more than the gravitational attraction between
the two bodies. Together these two methods comprise a deflection
campaign.
Artist Impression of Deep Impact - Credit: NASA |
“In a way, the kinetic impact was demonstrated by the Deep Impact
mission back in 2005,” said Schweickart. “But that was a very big target
and a small impactor that had relatively no effect on the comet. So, we haven’t really demonstrated the capability to have the guidance necessary to deflect a moderately sized asteroid.”
Most
important, the gravity tractor spacecraft would arrive prior to the
kinetic impactor, precisely determine the asteroid’s orbit and observe
the kinetic impact to determine its effectiveness. Following the
kinetic impact it would then determine whether or not any adjustment
trim were required.
“You want to know what happens when you do a
kinetic impact, so you want an ‘observer’ spacecraft up there as well,”
Schweickart explained. “You don’t do a kinetic impact without an
observation, because the impactor destroys itself in the process and
without the observer you wouldn’t know what happened except by tracking
the object over time, which is not the best way to find out whether you got the job done.”
So,
10-15 years ahead of an impact threat — or 50 years if you have that
much time — an observer spacecraft is sent up. “This, in fact, would
also be a gravity tractor,” Schweickart said. “It doesn’t have to be
real big, but bigger gets the job done a little faster. The feature you
are interested in the outset is not the gravity tractor but the
transponder that flies in formation with the asteroid and you track the
NEO, and back on Earth we can know exactly where it is.”
Schweickart
said even from ground tracking, we couldn’t get as precise an orbit
determination of an NEO as we could by sending a spacecraft to the
object. Additionally, generally speaking, we may not know when we send
an observer spacecraft what action will be required; whether an impact
will be required or if we could rely on the gravity tractor. “You may
launch at the latest possible time, but at that time the probability of
impact may be 1 in 5 or 1 or 2,” Schweickart said. “So the first thing
you are going to do with the observer spacecraft is make a precise orbit
determination and now you’re going to know if it really will impact
Earth and even perhaps where it will impact.”
Artist concept of an impactor heading towards an asteroid. Credit: ESA |
After the precise orbit is known, the required action would be
determined. “So now, if needed you launch a kinetic impactor and now you
know what job has to be done,” Schweickart said. “As the impactor is
getting ready to impact the asteroid, the observer spacecraft pulls back
and images what is going on so you can confirm the impact was solid,
–not a glancing blow — and then after impact is done, the observer
spacecraft goes back in and makes another precision orbit determination
so that you can confirm that you changed its velocity so that it no
longer will hit the Earth.”
The second issue is, even if the NEO’s
orbit has been changed so that it won’t hit Earth this time around,
there’s the possibility that during its near miss it might go through
what is called a “keyhole,” whereby Earth’s gravity would affect it just
enough that it would make an impact during a subsequent encounter with
Earth. This is a concern with the asteroid Apophis, which is projected
to miss Earth in 2029, but depending on several factors, could pass
through a keyhole causing it to return to hit Earth in 2036.
“So if it does go through that keyhole,” said Schweickart, “now you
can use the gravity tractor capability of the spacecraft to make a small
adjustment so that it goes between keyholes on that close approach. And
now you have a complete verified deflection campaign.”
Schweickart said a Delta-sized
rocket would be able to get a spacecraft to meet up with an asteroid.
“A Delta rocket would work,” he said, “but if there is a more
challenging orbit we might have to use something bigger, or we may have
to use a gravity assist and do mission planning for type of thing which
hasn’t been done yet. So we can get there, we can do it – but
ultimately we will probably need a heavy lift vehicle.”
As for the spacecraft, we can use a design similar to vehicles that have already been sent into space.
“A
gravity tractor could be like Deep Space 1 that launched in 1998,”
Schweickart said. “ You can make any spacecraft into a gravity tractor
fairly easily.”
Rusty Schweickart |
But it hasn’t been demonstrated and Schweickart says we need to do so.
“We
need to demonstrate it because we – NASA, the technical community, the
international community — need to learn what you find out when you do
something for the first time,” he said. “Playing a concerto in front of
an audience is quite different from playing it alone in your house.”
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