An anonymous reader quotes Qz:
NASA is not going to be able to find all the asteroids big enough to cause serious devastation on Earth by 2020 — or even 2033. Also: For a hypothetical attempt to send a spacecraft to divert an seriously dangerous incoming asteroid, we’ll need a ten year heads-up to build it and get it to the asteroid.
The good news? They’re working on it. “If a real threat does arise, we are prepared to pull together the information about what options might work and provide that information to decision-makers,” Lindley Johnson, NASA’s Planetary Defense Officer, told reporters.
But NASA’s methodology is now being criticized by former Microsoft CTO Nathan Myhrvold — in the peer-reviewed journal Icarus. An anonymous reader quotes Scientific American:

Since 2016, Nathan Myhrvold has argued that there are fatal flaws in the data from NASA’s NEOWISE mission to hunt space rocks… NASA is working to develop a follow-up space telescope that would use the same scientific approach to fulfill a mandate from the US Congress to discover nearly all of the space rocks that could pose a threat to Earth.
After 18 months of peer review, and plenty of acrimony on both sides, Myhrvold’s latest critique appeared on 22 May on the website of the journal Icarus. Among other things, he argues that NEOWISE estimates of asteroid diameters should not be trusted — a crucial challenge, because the size of an asteroid determines how much damage it would cause if it hit Earth. “These observations are the best we’re going to have for a very long time,” says Myhrvold. “And they weren’t really analysed very well at all.”
NASA hasn’t responded in detail to Myhrvold’s criticism, though a June 14th statement said their team “stands by its data and scientific findings,” noting that they’d also been published in several peer-reviewed journals.

Share on Google+

of this story at Slashdot.

…read more

Source:: Slashdot