01/23/10
So, you thought I was going to stop posting scary stories just because obuma no longer has a supermajority in the senate and the demonrats are shuffling toward the fire exits? How about this one:
The Sky is Falling!
From Space.com
Earth Not Properly Protected from Asteroids
By SPACE.com Staff
posted: 22 January 2010
The United States must do more to safeguard the Earth against destruction by an
asteroid than merely prepping nuclear missiles, a new report has found.
The 134-page report, released Friday by the National Academy of Sciences, states
that the $4 million spent by the United States to identify all potentially
dangerous asteroids near Earth is not enough to do the job mandated by Congress
in 2005. NASA is in dire need of more funding to meet the challenge, and less
than $1 million is currently set aside to research ways to counter space rocks
that do endanger the Earth — measures like developing the spacecraft and
technology to deflect incoming asteroids — the report states.
An early draft of the report, entitled "Defending the Earth: Near-Earth Object
Surveys and Hazard-Mitigation Strategies," was released in August 2009. The
final report, written by a committee of expert scientists, says NASA is
ill-equipped to catalogue 90 percent of the nearby asteroids that are 460 feet
(140 meters) across or larger as directed by Congress.
The United States should also be planning more methods of defending Earth
against an asteroid threat in the near-term. Nuclear weapons should be a last
resort – but they're also only useful if the world has years of advance notice
of a large, incoming space rock, the report states.
Likewise, decades of notice are required to build and launch spacecraft to push
an asteroid clear of Earth or smash it with a forceful, but non-nuclear,
projectile, the committee wrote in the report. Organized evacuations and other
civil defense efforts would only be useful in the event of smaller objects with
limited advance notice, it added.
NASA's asteroid and near-Earth object experts have said that the agency has
found about 85 percent of the largest nearby asteroids, ones that are a
half-mile (1 km) wide or larger. But only 15 percent of the 460-foot wide
asteroids near Earth have been discovered and tracked to date, and just 5
percent of nearby space rocks about 164 feet (50 meters) across have been found.
Lindley Johnson, NASA's manager of the Near-Earth Objects program, has said that
NASA needs up to $1 billion in additional funding over the next 15 years in
order to meet its goal of finding all nearby asteroids that could threaten
Earth.
But neither President Barack Obama's administration, nor that of former
President George W. Bush, have set aside funding to support near-Earth object
surveys, according to the report.
Recent meteor bursts over the United States have also highlighted the potential
danger of even smaller asteroids, so NASA should also try to find as many of
those objects – which range between 30 and 50 meters in size – as possible, the
report's committee found.
Even small space rocks pose a threat to people and property on Earth.
On Monday, a small, half-pound meteorite crashed through the roof of a doctor's
office in Virginia, punched through a wall and upper floor before slamming into
pieces when it hit a concrete floor at a speed that may have hit 200 mph. No
injuries were reported, but the doctor's office was populated at the time.
According to the report, current long-term projections estimate that there
could be up to 100 fatalities a year caused by space rock impacts, though
admittedly the chances of such rare hits are remote.
Still, "this presents the classic problem of the conflict between extremely
important and extremely rare," the report stated. "The committee considers work
on this problem as insurance, with the premiums devoted wholly towards
preventing the tragedy."
"Government sponsored space rock insurance is needed immediately," president obuma proclaimed.





