Indianapolis Post
IndianapolisPost.com Saturday 31st July 2010 Issue 307/8
  • More Space Science News

  • Trojan asteroids around Neptune could turn into comets that might hit Earth
  • 'Crippled' NASA Spirit Mars Rover may never call home ever again
  • NASA's Spirit Mars Rover may not call home
  • Orion Nebula provides clues to origin of life on Earth
  • Australia will change bushfire tactics following report
  • Military will supply Greece with fuel amid lorry strike
  • Wikileaks editor defends Web site
  • Beirut visited by Saudi and Syrian leaders
  • Toddler in US plays with unattended gun, kills friend
  • Police in Paris accused of brutality
  • Putin promises rebuilding after devastating wildfires in Russia
  • Israel attacks Gaza Strip
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    'Terminator asteroids' can regenerate after being nuked
    Indianapolis Post
    Friday 12th March, 2010  
    (ANI)


    It seems like the fictional 'Terminator' robot has met its cosmic equivalent in asteroids that quickly reassemble if blasted by a nuclear bomb.

    If a sizeable asteroid is found heading towards Earth, one option is to nuke it.

    But too small a bomb would cause the fragments to fly apart only slowly, allowing them to clump together under their mutual gravity.

    According to a report in New Scientist, simulations now show this can happen in an alarmingly short time.

    The simulations were presented last week at the Lunar and Planetary Science Conference in Houston, Texas.

    Don Korycansky of the University of California, Santa Cruz, and Catherine Plesko of the Los Alamos National Laboratory in New Mexico simulated blowing up asteroids 1 kilometre across.

    When the speed of dispersal was relatively low, it took only hours for the fragments to coalesce into a new rock.

    "The high-speed stuff goes away but the low-speed stuff reassembles (in) 2 to 18 hours," Korycansky said.

    Reassuringly, a 2009 study led by David Dearborn of the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory in California showed that a 900-kiloton nuclear device - which is within our capability - would permanently disperse a 1-kilometre asteroid. (ANI)

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