Asteroid Impact & Deflection Assessment Project Planned To Save Earth From Space Rocks

Space Agency Seeks Ideas For Asteroid-Smashing Mission
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By: SPACE.com Staff
Published: 01/17/2013 12:30 PM EST on SPACE.com

European space officials are seeking ideas to help develop a mission to knock an asteroid off its course, in case one day humans must pull off such a stunt to save Earth from a catastrophic space-rock collision.

The idea behind the joint US-European mission, dubbed AIDA (for Asteroid Impact & Deflection Assessment), is to send two small spacecraft to intercept a binary asteroid Didymos, which is projected to travel past Earth in 2022. This space rock system is actually a pair of asteroids, one smaller, one larger, that orbit each other as they zoom around the sun.

One 600-pound (300-kg) spacecraft, the Double Asteroid Redirection Test (DART) craft developed by researchers at Johns Hopkins University, would smash into the smaller of the two asteroids. The impact would knock the 500-foot- (150-meter-) wide space rock off its regular orbit.

Meanwhile, the European Space Agency's Asteroid Impact Monitor (AIM) craft would survey the collision. The crash would take place about 6.5 million miles (10.5 million kilometers), meaning scientists on the ground would also be able to measure the deflection using telescopes.

"The advantage is that the spacecraft are simple and independent," Andy Cheng of Johns Hopkins, who heads the U.S. side of the AIDA asteroid deflection project, said in a statement. "They can both complete their primary investigation without the other one."

ESA officials said that they are now seeking concepts for both ground- and space-based investigations to study of the physics of high-speed collisions between objects like a spacecraft and an asteroid.

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Before You Go

Astounding asteroid craters
Artist's impression of giant planetoid hitting Earth(01 of15)
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Artist's impression of a planetoid 1000 km wide (about the distance from New York to Chicago) hitting a young Earth. Donald Davis/NASA
Kebira Crater, Egypt(02 of15)
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NASA
Manicouagan Reservoir, Canada(03 of15)
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NASA
Shoemaker Crater, Western Australia(04 of15)
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U.S. Dept. of the Interior
Vredefort Dome, South Africa(05 of15)
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NASA
Kaali crater, Estonia(06 of15)
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Pt/Wikimedia Commons
Kara-Kul, Tajikistan(07 of15)
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NASA
Lake Bosumtwi, Ghana(08 of15)
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NASA
Clearwater Lakes double impact crater, Quebec(09 of15)
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NASA
Silverpit underwater crater, North Sea(10 of15)
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Phil Allen (PGL) and Simon Stewart (BP)
Gweni-Fada crater, Chad(11 of15)
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NASA
Morasko Crater, Poland(12 of15)
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Radomil/Wikimedia Commons
Barringer Meteor Crater, Arizona(13 of15)
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D. Roddy, U.S. Geological Survey
Nördlinger Ries, Germany(14 of15)
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NASA
Amguid Crater, Algeria(15 of15)
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Bertrand Devouard/Florence Devouard