An international program to protect the earth from impact catastrophe - Initial steps
Abstract
Risks posed by impacting objects of various sizes are analyzed using the Spaceguard Survey, the 1992 NASA report of International Near-Earth-Object (NEO) Detection workshop. The state-of-the-art technology makes it possible to discover and track nearly all earth-crossing asteroids and short-period comets large enough to threaten global catastrophe. To deal with this hazard a long-term telescopic search is required that reaches stellar magnitude 22 in order to achieve a nearly complete census of objects 1 km or larger. A program can be performed on the basis of an international network of six telescopes of 2-3 m aperture equipped with modern CCD detectors and automatic signal processing capability.
- Publication:
-
Washington, DC International Astronautical Federation Congress
- Pub Date:
- August 1992
- Bibcode:
- 1992wadc.iafcQQ...M
- Keywords:
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- Asteroid Capture;
- Comets;
- Earth Environment;
- Hypervelocity Impact;
- Meteorite Collisions;
- Meteoritic Damage;
- Disasters;
- Earth Orbital Environments;
- Impact Damage;
- International Cooperation;
- Astronautics (General)