Berliner Boersenzeitung - Nuking a huge asteroid could save Earth, lab experiment suggests

EUR -
AED 4.36266
AFN 78.403573
ALL 96.652271
AMD 448.82188
ANG 2.126486
AOA 1089.329377
ARS 1707.957731
AUD 1.717838
AWG 2.13827
AZN 2.029696
BAM 1.955895
BBD 2.387966
BDT 145.077073
BGN 1.994971
BHD 0.447892
BIF 3494.023273
BMD 1.187928
BND 1.504623
BOB 8.2104
BRL 6.273922
BSD 1.185628
BTN 107.747253
BWP 15.604301
BYN 3.380836
BYR 23283.387086
BZD 2.384566
CAD 1.631518
CDF 2619.381102
CHF 0.923388
CLF 0.026016
CLP 1027.260466
CNY 8.261266
CNH 8.261629
COP 4383.157015
CRC 586.708847
CUC 1.187928
CUP 31.48009
CVE 110.270376
CZK 24.241273
DJF 211.13585
DKK 7.469218
DOP 74.241119
DZD 153.482633
EGP 55.894505
ERN 17.818919
ETB 184.307125
FJD 2.628231
FKP 0.871913
GBP 0.868061
GEL 3.195286
GGP 0.871913
GHS 12.92963
GIP 0.871913
GMD 87.315866
GNF 10385.156596
GTQ 9.099444
GYD 248.062093
HKD 9.264216
HNL 31.444514
HRK 7.536449
HTG 155.381035
HUF 381.711533
IDR 19949.348607
ILS 3.699546
IMP 0.871913
INR 109.026808
IQD 1556.185565
IRR 50041.463503
ISK 145.342496
JEP 0.871913
JMD 186.632814
JOD 0.842267
JPY 183.553272
KES 153.242603
KGS 103.884412
KHR 4787.349845
KMF 495.968443
KPW 1069.155932
KRW 1719.567159
KWD 0.364432
KYD 0.988048
KZT 595.749043
LAK 25579.031676
LBP 101627.232593
LKR 367.084806
LRD 219.350694
LSL 19.036537
LTL 3.507642
LVL 0.718565
LYD 7.487207
MAD 10.842808
MDL 20.001807
MGA 5351.615555
MKD 61.633005
MMK 2494.571257
MNT 4236.231983
MOP 9.522664
MRU 47.391748
MUR 54.074375
MVR 18.365957
MWK 2058.679306
MXN 20.58703
MYR 4.697665
MZN 75.730237
NAD 19.036539
NGN 1677.354548
NIO 43.598689
NOK 11.613718
NPR 172.389599
NZD 1.990017
OMR 0.456761
PAB 1.185658
PEN 3.981344
PGK 5.145078
PHP 70.151302
PKR 332.005401
PLN 4.206863
PYG 7968.220766
QAR 4.325661
RON 5.098627
RSD 117.414757
RUB 90.905771
RWF 1726.059257
SAR 4.454742
SBD 9.599607
SCR 17.415488
SDG 714.537467
SEK 10.617676
SGD 1.507581
SHP 0.891254
SLE 28.973532
SLL 24910.253491
SOS 676.410199
SRD 45.289757
STD 24587.709373
STN 24.530711
SVC 10.374506
SYP 13137.977718
SZL 19.030304
THB 36.967133
TJS 11.068326
TMT 4.169627
TND 3.39777
TOP 2.860245
TRY 51.545184
TTD 8.057393
TWD 37.390618
TZS 3011.960353
UAH 51.116301
UGX 4203.20491
USD 1.187928
UYU 44.492356
UZS 14391.746512
VES 425.529606
VND 31051.247706
VUV 142.273124
WST 3.273441
XAF 655.972413
XAG 0.010837
XAU 0.000234
XCD 3.210434
XCG 2.136804
XDR 0.815816
XOF 656.335155
XPF 119.331742
YER 281.299678
ZAR 19.014942
ZMK 10692.774215
ZMW 23.149641
ZWL 382.512303
  • SCS

    0.0200

    16.14

    +0.12%

  • RBGPF

    -0.8300

    82.4

    -1.01%

  • RYCEF

    0.0000

    17.12

    0%

  • CMSC

    0.0300

    23.78

    +0.13%

  • RELX

    -0.3900

    39.51

    -0.99%

  • BTI

    -0.1700

    58.99

    -0.29%

  • GSK

    1.1700

    50.32

    +2.33%

  • NGG

    1.0800

    82.58

    +1.31%

  • AZN

    1.2800

    94.23

    +1.36%

  • RIO

    0.0400

    90.47

    +0.04%

  • BCE

    -0.0500

    25.15

    -0.2%

  • CMSD

    0.0300

    24.16

    +0.12%

  • BCC

    -0.9300

    83.4

    -1.12%

  • JRI

    0.0500

    13.73

    +0.36%

  • VOD

    0.0600

    14.23

    +0.42%

  • BP

    0.2300

    36.76

    +0.63%

Nuking a huge asteroid could save Earth, lab experiment suggests
Nuking a huge asteroid could save Earth, lab experiment suggests / Photo: N. Bartmann - EUROPEAN SPACE AGENCY/AFP/File

Nuking a huge asteroid could save Earth, lab experiment suggests

Humanity could use a nuclear bomb to deflect a massive, life-threatening asteroid hurtling towards Earth in the future, according to scientists who tested the theory in the labaratory by blasting X-rays at a marble-sized "mock asteroid".

Text size:

The biggest real-life test of our planetary defences was carried out in 2022, when NASA's fridge-sized DART spacecraft smashed into a 160-metre (525-feet) wide asteroid, successfully knocking it well off course.

But for bigger asteroids, merely crashing spaceships into them will probably not do the trick.

When the roughly 10-kilometre wide Chicxulub asteroid struck the Yucatan peninsula around 66 million years ago, it is believed to have plunged Earth into darkness, sent kilometres-high tsunamis rippling around the globe and killed three quarters of all life -- including wiping out the dinosaurs.

We humans are hoping to avoid a similar fate.

There is no current threat looming, but scientists have been working on how to stave off any big asteroids that could come our way in the future.

A leading theory has been to be blow them up with a nuclear bomb -- a last-ditch plan famously depicted in the 1998 sci-fi action movie "Armageddon".

In the movie, Bruce Willis and a plucky team of drillers save Earth from an asteroid 1,000 kilometres wide -- roughly the size of Texas.

For a proof-of-concept study published in the journal Nature Physics this week, a team of US scientists worked on a much smaller scale, taking aim at a mock asteroid just 12 millimetres (half an inch) wide.

To test whether the theory would work, they used what was billed as the world's largest X-ray machine at Sandia National Laboratories in Albuquerque, New Mexico.

The machine is capable of generating "the brightest flash of X-rays in the world using 80 trillion watts of electricity", Sandia's Nathan Moore, the lead study author, told AFP.

Much of the energy created by a nuclear explosion is in the form of X-rays. Since there is no air in space, there would be no shockwave or fireball.

But the X-rays still pack a powerful punch.

- Turned into a 'rocket engine' -

For the lab experiment, the X-rays easily vaporised the surface of the mock asteroid.

The vaporising material then propelled the mock asteroid in the opposite direction, so that it effectively "turned into a rocket engine," Moore said.

It reached speeds of 250 kilometres an hour, "about as fast as a high-speed train," he added.

The test marked the first time that predictions about how X-rays would affect an asteroid had been confirmed, Moore said.

"It really proves this concept could work."

The scientists used modelling to scale up their experiment, estimating that X-rays from a nuclear blast could deflect an asteroid up to four kilometres wide -- if given enough advanced notice.

The biggest asteroids are the easiest to detect ahead of time, so "this approach could be quite viable" even for asteroids the size of the dinosaur-killing Chicxulub, Moore said.

The experiment was based on using a one-megaton nuclear weapon. The largest ever detonated was the 50-megaton Soviet Tsar Bomba.

If there was to be a planet-saving mission in the future, the nuclear bomb would need to be placed within a few kilometres of the asteroid -- and millions of kilometres away from Earth, Moore said.

- Asteroids come in many flavours -

Testing out the theory using a real nuke would be dangerous, hugely expensive -- and banned by international treaties.

But there is still plenty to be discovered before such a high-risk test.

The largest uncertainty right now is that asteroids can "come in many flavours", Moore said.

"We have to be prepared for every scenario."

For example, the asteroid hit by DART, Dimorphos, turned out to be a loosely held-together pile of rubble.

The European Space Agency's Hera mission is scheduled to launch next month on a mission to find out more about its composition -- and the finer details about how DART sent it packing.

Mary Burkey, a staff scientist at California's Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory that was not involved in the new study, has run computer simulations about using nukes on asteroids.

She praised the study, saying that "being able to match my calculations to real-life data increases the credibility of my results."

Her simulations have also demonstrated that such a mission "would be a very effective means to defend planet Earth", Burkey told AFP.

"However, in order for it to work, there must be enough time after a mission for the extra push of velocity to move the asteroid's trajectory off Earth."

(T.Renner--BBZ)