We'll see if it hits... the day after, somebody post, alright?

http://abcnews.go.com/Technology/asteroid-2012-da14-pass-close-earth-february-15/story?id=18413554

  By NED POTTER <http://abcnews.go.com/author/ned_potter> 
(@NedPotterABC<http://twitter.com/NedPotterABC>) 
and GINA SUNSERI 
Feb. 6, 2013 
   
It begins to get on your nerves. Every now and then -- a few times a year, 
depending on what you count -- an 
asteroid<http://abcnews.go.com/Technology/asteroid-hunter-envisions-telescope-prevent-dangerous-earth-collisions/story?id=18157801>goes
 whizzing past Earth at fairly close range, reminding us that sometimes 
outer space isn't quite as, well, spacious as we may like to think. 

This month's visit will be by a fast-moving space rock called 2012 
DA14<http://abcnews.go.com/Technology/wireStory/whew-big-asteroid-longer-threat-earth-18184546>,
 
which will pass about 17,200 miles from Earth's surface on Feb. 15. It's 
only about 150 feet across, so astronomers say not to bother to look for it 
in the sky -- but it will be closer than the communications satellites that 
ring the planet, 22,000 miles away. 

NASA scientists have had a lot of time to plot the orbit of 2012 DA14, and 
they say they are quite sure it will miss us. There are dust-sized pieces 
of debris plowing harmlessly into the atmosphere all the time; we see some 
of them as shooting stars at night. Impacts like the one that wiped out the 
dinosaurs, 65 million years ago, are separated by tens of millions of 
years. 
  
"But it has happened and it can happen again," said Humberto Campins of the 
University of Central Florida. "So as a species it is important we learn 
all we can about asteroids in case we have to deflect one. And there are 
other reasons for us to investigate. Asteroids could provide precious 
resources both to Earth and to space travelers, and they hold secrets to 
how our planet and life on it formed." 

So, say scientists, it's worth keeping a lookout -- and worth paying 
attention when something the size of 2012 DA14 passes by. The chances that 
any one object will hit us are very small, but almost inevitably there will 
be asteroids or comets headed our way, with serious consequences that we 
may now be able to prevent. 

Edward T. Lu is a physicist and former astronaut who flew two space shuttle 
missions and spent six months on the International Space Station. For 
skeptics who think asteroid impacts are science fiction, he said, check 
what happened in Siberia in 1908. 

A 330-foot meteor exploded in the atmosphere above the Tunguska River with 
an impact 1,000 times more powerful than the atomic bomb that destroyed 
Hiroshima. The force was enough to destroy an area the size of San 
Francisco. 

Lu now heads the non-profit B612 Foundation, a group dedicated to hunting 
down asteroids before they hit Earth. B612 wants to launch the first 
privately funded deep-space mission: Sentinel, a space telescope to orbit 
the sun and map the inner Solar System in search of asteroids that could 
smash into Earth. 

NASA already watches with ground-based telescopes, but every now and then 
there's a surprise -- a hunk of rock or metal that passes near Earth 
without much advance notice. 

"For every one we know about, there are about 100 more we don't know 
about," Lu said. "We have to find the other 99." 

"Once we find an asteroid," he said, "it is possible for us to predict its 
trajectory. We know the government wants to discover asteroids big enough 
to wipe out the planet, but we also want to find those that could wipe out 
a city the size of New York, or Hong Kong, or Houston." 

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   Feb. 6, 2013 
      
   Fifteen years ago, in the movie "Armageddon," Bruce Willis led a team of 
   roughneck astronauts who tried to blow up a threatening asteroid with a 
   nuclear weapon. Lu and other scientists -- even those who spend their 
   careers watching for threats -- say the reality would be much less 
   dramatic. If you spot an incoming asteroid well in advance -- and that's 
   the idea behind Sentinel -- you just have to nudge it ever so slightly. 
     
    Lu and astronaut Stan Love have proposed a space tug, a rocket that 
   would launch to the same orbit as an asteroid threatening to hit the Earth, 
   and push it just enough to make it harmless. 
   
   "You don't have to change much. One hundred thousandth of a mile an hour 
   is enough, 10 years ahead of time, to cause an asteroid to miss the 
   rendezvous with Earth," Lu said. 
   
   With this month's visitor, 2012 DA14, no action will be necessary. Some 
   scientists will use the opportunity to take a relatively close-up look at a 
   passerby; others say to think of it as a sort of shot across our bow. 
   
   "We have been given a gift, the ability to protect our planet," Lu said. 
   "We shouldn't squander it."
   

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