In addition to this press release, we have information
on asteroid 1950 DA available here on the NEO website:

http://neo.jpl.nasa.gov/1950da/

This section includes images of the asteroid, a radar movie,
simulations of the asteroid's orbit, and a video segment
narrated by Jon Giorgini.

Ron Baalke

---------------------------------------------------------------


MEDIA RELATIONS OFFICE
JET PROPULSION LABORATORY
CALIFORNIA INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY
NATIONAL AERONAUTICS AND SPACE ADMINISTRATION
PASADENA, CALIF. 91109 TELEPHONE (818) 354-5011
http://www.jpl.nasa.gov

Contact: Martha J. Heil (818) 354-0850                  
       
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE                         April 4, 2002

RADAR PUSHES LIMITS OF ASTEROID IMPACT PREDICTION

     Applying unprecedented refinements to the analysis of 
celestial hazards, NASA astronomers have identified a 
potential close encounter with Earth more than eight centuries 
in the future by an asteroid two-thirds of a mile (one 
kilometer) wide.

     What will most likely be a miss, even without preventive 
measures, will come on March 16, 2880, said Jon Giorgini, a 
senior engineer at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, 
Calif. Odds for a collision are at most one in 300, and 
probably even more remote, based on what is known about the 
asteroid so far.  Still, that makes this space rock, named 
1950 DA, a greater hazard than any other known asteroid.  

     "This is not something to worry about," said Giorgini, 
leader of a team reporting about the asteroid in the April 5 
edition of the journal Science. "We're showing that searches 
with optical telescopes and follow-up observations with radar 
telescopes can provide us centuries of advance notice about 
potential close encounters of asteroids with Earth. That's 
plenty of time to consider the options -- 35 generations, in 
fact."

     "This report is a success story for our efforts to 
identify potential troublemakers," said JPL's Dr. Don Yeomans, 
manager of the NASA Near Earth Object Program. "Radar 
observations are helping us push predictions 5 to 10 times 
further into the future."

     This report differs from previous ones about other 
asteroids' Earth-impact potential. Estimates of impact risks 
in earlier cases came from a few nights' optical observations 
of newly found asteroids. Astronomers soon ruled out the 
possible impacts after a few more observations narrowed 
uncertainties about the asteroids' orbits.  The current orbit 
of 1950 DA has been mapped with great accuracy using precise 
radar data and a 51-year span of optical data. Uncertainty 
about how close it will come to Earth in 2880 stems from gaps 
in knowing physical details of the asteroid that could subtly 
alter its course over the centuries. 

     "How close 1950 DA will approach Earth turns out to 
depend on the asteroid's physical attributes -- it's size, 
shape and mass, and how it spins, reflects light and radiates 
heat into space," Giorgini said. These things are unlikely to 
be known any time soon. The way the asteroid radiates energy 
absorbed from the Sun back into space has the biggest 
potential effect, he said. Releasing heat in one direction 
nudges the asteroid in the opposite direction. The resulting 
acceleration is tiny, but over the centuries acts like a weak 
rocket and could make the difference between a hit and a miss.  

     Asteroid 1950 DA was discovered from Lick Observatory, 
Mount Hamilton, Calif., in 1950. It faded from view for five 
decades then was found from Lowell Observatory in Arizona in 
2000. Astronomers used large dish antennas of NASA's Deep 
Space Network site at Goldstone, Calif., and the Arecibo 
Observatory in Puerto Rico to examine the asteroid with radar 
when it passed at a distance 21 times farther away than the 
Moon in March 2001.

     "Once an asteroid is discovered, radar is the most 
powerful way to find its exact orbit and, apart from sending a 
spacecraft, the only way to see what it looks like," said 
JPL's Dr. Steve Ostro, who led the radar observations of 1950 
DA.

     Giorgini refined calculations of future orbits by 
including factors such as the push from sunshine and the 
potential gravitational tug from 7,000 other asteroids and 
nearby stars. Effects of each small influence on the 
asteroid's movement could be amplified by 15 gravitational 
tugs during close approaches to Earth and Mars -- none of 
which have any chance of an impact -- prior to 2880. "It's 
like predicting a 15-bank shot in a pool game," Giorgini said. 
"We know the cue stroke extremely well because it is right now 
and we can measure it. But at each future bank, small 
variations accumulate and change the next bounce, which 
changes the following one and so on. What we've done is find 
the range of changes possible due to tilt, imperfections and 
fuzz on the table, the bounce of the cushions, and wind 
blowing across the room.  We need to know more about the 'cue 
ball' to really be sure of how the last three banks in 2809, 
2840 and 2860 will line things up for 2880."

     If future generations' studies of 1950 DA indicate it 
ought to be diverted to prevent a collision, the subtle 
influences that its physical properties have on its motion 
might be manipulated to advantage. For example, Giorgini 
suggested, its surface could be dusted with chalk or charcoal 
to alter the way it reflects light, or a spacecraft propelled 
with a solar sail could collapse its reflective sail around 
the asteroid.  In any event, determining asteroids' physical 
properties will be important for long-term calculations of 
impact hazards.

     In addition to Giorgini, Ostro and Yeomans, authors of 
the report include Dr. Lance Benner, Dr. Paul Chodas, Dr. 
Steven Chesley, Dr. Myles Standish, Dr. Ray Jurgens, Randy 
Rose and Dr. Alan Chamberlin, all of JPL; Dr. Scott Hudson, 
Washington State University, Pullman; Dr. Michael Nolan, 
Arecibo Observatory; Dr. Arnold Klemola, Lick Observatory; and 
Dr. Jean-Luc Margot, California Institute of Technology, 
Pasadena.

     Images are available at http://neo.jpl.nasa.gov and 
http://www.jpl.nasa.gov .   

     A videofile will be available on NASA Television April 4 
and 5 during the NASA TV feed scheduled for noon, 3 p.m., 6 
p.m., 9 p.m., and midnight EST.  NASA TV is broadcast on GE-2, 
transponder 9C, C-Band, located at 85 degrees West longitude. 
The frequency is 3880.0 MHz. Polarization is vertical and 
audio is monaural at 6.8 MHz. For NASA TV schedule information 
see http://www.nasa.gov/ntv/ .

     Arecibo Observatory is operated by the National Astronomy 
and Ionosphere Center at Cornell University, Ithaca, N.Y., 
under an agreement with the National Science Foundation. 
NASA's Office of Space Science, Washington, D.C supported the 
radar observations.  JPL is managed for NASA by the California 
Institute of Technology.

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