Credit: Emily Lakdawalla/Ted Stryk
Here are 5 reasons why we should care about asteroids:
Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/ UCLA/MPS/DLR/PSI
For example, although Ceres and Vesta formed at roughly the same time - within the first 10 million years of the solar system's existence - they have very different compositions now. Vesta, at some point, melted completely and then resolidified, so it is now smooth. Meanwhile Ceres does not show signs of having gone through this melting.
It's possible, Raymond said, that Vesta experienced more collisions, or that it had a high amount of a radioactive form of aluminum that would have given off heat as it underwent radioactive decay. By studying each asteroid, scientists will be able to solve this mystery.
Credit: B. E. Schmidt and S. C. Radcliffe
Asteroids such as 2 Pallas and 10 Hygiea, which are both believed to have had water in the past, appear to have organic (carbon-based) compounds on them, Raymond said. Today, these asteroids have a more primitive chemical composition than Earth has - they are more similar to the conditions that existed in the solar system's younger years. By studying them, we may learn about how life arose on our own planet.
"There are conditions that may have been conducive to life in the past," Raymond said. Plus, scientists think asteroids that landed on Earth long ago may have deposited some of the building blocks that helped start life here.
Credit: Ben Zellner (Georgia Southern University) / Peter Thomas (Cornell University) / NASA
Besides the opportunity for mining, these asteroids are also interesting from a scientific perspective, because studying them complements our studies of the major planets, Raymond said. Analyzing the differences between the planets and the smaller asteroids is like taking slices of the solar system at different times during its formation.
Credit: UH/IA
But 2010 AL30 was just at 36 feet (11 meters) wide. More worrisome is the prediction that asteroid Apophis will come very close to Earth on April 13, 2036. Although NASA predicts that it will pass no closer than 18,300 miles above Earth's surface, Apophis is larger than two football fields. While that's not big enough to create Hollywood-style global devastation, it could cause significant regional damage, were it ever to strike Earth.
Credit: Lockheed Martin
In an panel discussion at that time, astrophysicist John Grunsfeld - a former NASA astronaut who flew on five shuttle missions - suggested that one goal might be sending humans to purposely move an asteroid, to nudge the space rock to change its trajectory. Such a feat, he said, would show that humanity could deflect a space rock if one threatened to crash into the planet.
"By going to a near-Earth object, an asteroid, and perhaps even modifying its trajectory slightly, we would demonstrate a hallmark in human history," Grunsfeld said. "The first time humans showed that we can make better decisions than the dinosaurs made 65 million years ago."
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