POST Online Media Lite Edition



 

Asteroids are stronger, harder to destroy than previously thought

Staff Writer |
A popular theme in the movies is that of an incoming asteroid that could extinguish life on the planet, and our heroes are launched into space to blow it up.

Article continues below




But incoming asteroids may be harder to break than scientists previously thought, finds a Johns Hopkins study that used a new understanding of rock fracture and a new computer modeling method to simulate asteroid collisions.

The findings, to be published in the March 15 print issue of Icarus, can aid in the creation of asteroid impact and deflection strategies, increase understanding of solar system formation and help design asteroid mining efforts.

"We used to believe that the larger the object, the more easily it would break, because bigger objects are more likely to have flaws.

"Our findings, however, show that asteroids are stronger than we used to think and require more energy to be completely shattered," says Charles El Mir, a recent Ph.D graduate from the Johns Hopkins University's Department of Mechanical Engineering and the paper's first author.

Researchers understand physical materials like rocks at a laboratory scale (about the size of your fist), but it has been difficult to translate this understanding to city-size objects like asteroids.

In the early 2000s, a different research team created a computer model into which they input various factors such as mass, temperature, and material brittleness, and simulated an asteroid about a kilometer in diameter striking head-on into a 25-kilometer diameter target asteroid at an impact velocity of five kilometers per second.

Their results suggested that the target asteroid would be completely destroyed by the impact.

In the new study, El Mir and his colleagues, K.T. Ramesh, director of the Hopkins Extreme Materials Institute and Derek Richardson, professor of astronomy at the University of Maryland, entered the same scenario into a new computer model called the Tonge-Ramesh model, which accounts for the more detailed, smaller-scale processes that occur during an asteroid collision.

Previous models did not properly account for the limited speed of cracks in the asteroids.

"Our question was, how much energy does it take to actually destroy an asteroid and break it into pieces?" says El Mir.

The simulation was separated into two phases: a short-timescale fragmentation phase and a long-timescale gravitational reaccumulation phase.

The first phase considered the processes that begin immediately after an asteroid is hit, processes that occur within fractions of a second.

The second, long-timescale phase considers the effect of gravity on the pieces that fly off the asteroid's surface after the impact, with gravitational reaccumulation occurring over many hours after impact.

In the first phase, after the asteroid was hit, millions of cracks formed and rippled throughout the asteroid, parts of the asteroid flowed like sand, and a crater was created.

This phase of the model examined the individual cracks and predicted overall patterns of how those cracks propagate.

The new model showed that the entire asteroid is not broken by the impact, unlike what was previously thought.

Instead, the impacted asteroid had a large damaged core that then exerted a strong gravitational pull on the fragments in the second phase of the simulation.

The research team found that the end result of the impact was not just a "rubble pile" - a collection of weak fragments loosely held together by gravity.

Instead, the impacted asteroid retained significant strength because it had not cracked completely, indicating that more energy would be needed to destroy asteroids.

Meanwhile, the damaged fragments were now redistributed over the large core, providing guidance to those who might want to mine asteroids during future space ventures.

"It may sound like science fiction but a great deal of research considers asteroid collisions.

"For example, if there's an asteroid coming at earth, are we better off breaking it into small pieces, or nudging it to go a different direction? And if the latter, how much force should we hit it with to move it away without causing it to break? These are actual questions under consideration," adds El Mir.

"We are impacted fairly often by small asteroids, such as in the Chelyabinsk event a few years ago," says Ramesh.

"It is only a matter of time before these questions go from being academic to defining our response to a major threat.

"We need to have a good idea of what we should do when that time comes - and scientific efforts like this one are critical to help us make those decisions."


What to read next

Projectile cannon experiments show how asteroids can deliver water
How to destroy an asteroid
Organics on Ceres may be more abundant than originally thought

U.S.: Clipper system tracking eastward; heavy precipitation continues for northwest

 
A robust atmospheric river will continue to dump overly abundant moisture across the Pacific Northwest which in turn will keep the threat for excessive rainfall and flooding elevated through Thursday.
 
 

Latest

Calgary filled 5,000 potholes in November
Rochester, N.Y., USDA Wildlife Services to disperse winter crows
Poland seeks return of EU permits for Ukrainian haulers but Brussels opposes that
UK: DS Smith drivers delivering cardboard packaging striking over pay

NEWS

Second 48 hour railway strike in Belgium

18 percent of Made in China garments contain carcinogenic chemical
Brazil and Paraguay launch Operation DAKOVO to combat international arms trafficking
5.9 magnitude earthquake hits Philippine capital region
Snow covered Munich airport closed to traffic on Tuesday
Bosnia and Herzegovina Prosecutor Office welcomed largest sentence imposed for corruption so far
 

BUSINESS

Delaware offers tuition incentive to attract certified nurse assistants

Rhode Island AG Neronha files new claims in lawsuit against residential solar panel company for deceptive sales
Jordan: EUR 100 million EIB backing to tackle water scarcity through desalination and conveyance project
Netherlands: EIB signs €100 million loan for Limburg water infrastructure
Swiss nuclear power plants running out of staff
Kazakhstan signs deals for 3GW of wind power
 

Trending Now

Moscow residents to name baby panda born in Moscow Zoo

U.S.: Clipper system tracking eastward; heavy precipitation continues for northwest

Rochester, N.Y., USDA Wildlife Services to disperse winter crows

Calgary filled 5,000 potholes in November


POLITICS

New York Governor Hochul announces start of project to modernize Ogdensburg International Airport

President Lula in Berlin for first talks between Brazil and Germany in eight years
Greece cut coal use by over 80%
Sourth Dakota Governor Noem supports Congressman Gallagher's bill protecting U.S. farmland from China
Slovakia to extend grain embargo, expand list of banned agricultural products from Ukraine
Brazil to join OPEC+ in 2024
 

Today We Recommend

18 percent of Made in China garments contain carcinogenic chemical


Highlights 

Alaska Airlines to acquire Hawaiian Airlines for $1.9 billion

Roche to acquire Carmot Therapeutics for $2.7 billion

Huge cantaloupes recall after U.S. Salmonella outbreak


COMPANIES

UK: Iceland warehouse workers to walk out as South West face store shortages

AG Ferguson on federal complaint against Meta: Zuckerberg new Facbook is dangerous for young people
Oxford Biomedica signs agreement to acquire ABL Europe from Institut Mérieux
Atlas Copco signs deal to acquire Kracht
Škoda begins production of fourth generation Superb at Bratislava plant
Airbus begins production of Galileo G2 satellites in Germany
 

CAREERS

Siemens Healthineers: Vivek Kanade new head for Middle East and Africa operations

Liquid Intelligent Technologies appoints Lerato Dipuo Phueginia Pule as CFO
PwC selects Mohamed Kande as next global chair
Billerud appoints Ivar Vatne as CEO
New Pacific Metals appoints two to board
Pyxis Oncology appoints Ken Kobayashi as chief medical officer
 

ECONOMY

West Virginia yearly revenue collections $286.2 million ahead of estimate

Austrian economy slips into recession
Ireland in recession as personal consumer spending increased
Brazil jobless rate falls to 7.6 pct
Missouri Governor Parson announced state’s Consensus Revenue Estimate
Canadian GDP declines in Q3
 

EARNINGS

Dell Technologies revenue $22.3 billion

American Outdoor Brands Q2 sales $57.9 million
Marvell Technology Q3 revenue $1.419 billion
BMO Financial Q4 income $1,617 million
Cracker Barrel Old Country Store profit $5.46 million
Kroger Q3 earnings to $646 million
 

OP-ED

Micromanaging is the worst enemy of efficiency and teamwork

Niger set to monetize massive gas reserves through Saharan natural gas pipeline
Putting the brakes on EV folly that choked the market
Oil discovery in Kavango Basin may mean huge benefits for Namibians
Cape Town and Dubai battle over Africa's energy future
Is America going to lose its superpower status?
 

AGRIFISH

France puts country on high alert for bird flu

Kentucky names new Deputy State Veterinarian
New York: $4.25 million for more than two dozen meat businesses
Hong Kong suspends import of poultry meat and products from areas in Belgium and Germany
Philippines joins Blue Carbon Action Partnership to strengthen coastal ecosystems
Thailand aims to export more bananas
 

LEADERSHIP

Happy workforce is productive workforce, says study

LinkedIn can trigger feelings of imposter syndrome
Study suggests corporate culture thwarts efforts to hire innovative candidates
Workplace wellness policies could soften effects of workaholism
Customers willing to wait longer for delivery when they shop in store showroom
Internal crowdfunding fosters innovation and engages employees
 

CRIME

Swiss bank Banque Pictet admits to conspiring with U.S. taxpayers to hide assets and income in offshore accounts

FINRA fines BofA Securities $24 million for treasuries spoofing and related supervisory failures
BNP Paribas subsidiary fined maximum amount over Swiss franc loans
Commission fines Rabobank €26.6 million over Euro-denominated bonds trading cartel
Shell Energy fined £1.4m by Ofcom for consumer protection breaches
Italy's antitrust agency fines energy companies for aggressive billing
 

Magazine

TRAVEL

Sai Kung Hoi Arts Festival returns to Hong Kong until Janury 14

Go on a sleigh ride in Estonia Varbola stronghold
Bora Bora, first born paradise in French Polynesia
Mushrooms of all kinds will be featured at Autumn Bio Festival in Portugal
Festive winter fun in and around Hannover
Premier Australian motoring event returns this weekend
 

SEA, LAND, AIR

Chevrolet Tahoe and Suburban come with new look

Chinese HiPhi revealed electric sedan, too bad it can't be trusted
New 2025 Ram 1500, Hurricane 3L and 420 horsepower
Gulfstream G700 business jet to fly 14,353 kilometers
Beneteau First, slender mainsail and generously sized foresails
Porsche launches speedboat with 400 kW
 

DESIGN

Hollywood Regency, the style that's always in

Filippo Loreti, premium Italian timepieces for adventurous gentlemen
Creative furniture that redefines the meaning of sofa
Perfect ovens for perfect pizza at home
Designer radiators, focal point that heats your room
What to do and what not to do when designing your living room
 

GADGETS

Rode NT1 5th Generation, the ultimate studio microphone

Motorola g family smartphones bring something for everyone
Focal Shape 65 monitor, loudspeakers for home or professional studio
NAD C 268 stereo power amplifier, multipurpose workhorse
DeVore Fidelity Orangutan O/Reference, €90,000 for ultimate sound
Motorola razr, foldable phone that allows you to live your real life
 

HEALTH

Researchers crack cellular code on protein folding offering hope for many new therapeutic avenues

Huge cantaloupes recall after U.S. Salmonella outbreak
Pathogens use force to breach immune defenses
Governor Moore announces expanded access to contraceptive care across Maryland
California Governor Newsom announces new legislation to prevent illicit use and trafficking of xylazine
Argentina records hundreds of Trichinella cases
 

MEANTIME

France to donate € 500 million to Brazil's Amazon Fund

New deep space radar will transform UK security
Massive planet too big for its sun pushes astronomers to rethink exoplanet formation
Vera Rubin telescope will generate mind boggling amount of data
Russia launches cargo spacecraft to International Space Station with equipment and gifts
Earth experiences second geomagnetic storm in six days