Scientists consider meteor strike response

Scientists at a US conference are exploring the potential response of the international community to an asteroid on collision course with Earth.

Space

Scientists are grappling with the potential response to an asteroid hit on Earth. (AAP)

A US conference that opened Monday will include an exercise to test how NASA and the international community would respond to an asteroid found to be on a collision course with Earth.

Groups of scientists will address what should be done, including whether to attempt to deflect the object. Among the questions that will be posed are whether world leaders would provide funding and make other decisions at critical points, and how the public would respond.

The five-day conference, being held in Maryland, is the sixth by the International Academy of Astronautics (IAA) on planetary defence and reflects the increasing recognition of the potential threat posed by objects in near-Earth orbit.

NASA administrator Jim Bridenstine told the group that a meteor that struck in 2013, injuring hundreds of people and damaging buildings over a large area in Russia, was an example of the danger.

While that meteor had a diameter of just 20 metres, there are thousands of objects in near-Earth orbit that are larger, he said.

NASA is currently working to detect, track and characterise at least 90 per cent of an estimated 25,000 such objects that are 140 metres in diameter or bigger.


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Source: AAP


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