http://space.newscientist.com/article/dn14880-space-rock-found-on-collision-course-with-earth.html
Updated 22:24 06 October 2008 - NewScientist.com news service
For the first time, astronomers have found an object on a certain collision course with Earth.
Fortunately, it is so small it is not expected to cause any damage, burning up in the atmosphere
somewhere above northern Sudan in the wee hours of Tuesday morning. It may, however, produce a
brilliant 'shooting star'.
The space rock, dubbed 2008 TC3, was first spotted on Monday in a survey by the Mt Lemmon
Observatory near Tucson, Arizona.
Its brightness suggests it is no more than about 5 metres across - so small it will likely be
destroyed in the atmosphere, says Andrea Milani Comparetti of the University of Pisa in Italy.
Rocks of such size are thought to hit the atmosphere every few months, says Steve Chesley, an
astronomer at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory.
"The event is not unusual - what is unique is that it's been predicted beforehand," Milani told New
Scientist. "This is the first time we see something arriving, compute that it's going to impact, and
announce it is going to impact before it happens."
The rock is due to hit the atmosphere above northern Sudan on Tuesday at 0246 GMT. It will be
travelling from west to east, and may be visible from a few hundred kilometres away.
Long trail
The meteor it produces is likely to be spectacular. The rock will release about 1 kiloton of energy
in the atmosphere - the equivalent of a low-energy nuclear bomb, says Milani. But it's not clear
whether it will do so all at once or over a longer period, perhaps lasting a minute or so.
It will hit the atmosphere at an angle of 20°, so "it will make a long trail in the atmosphere",
says Milani. "But we cannot honestly predict how long it will be. [The rock] might end up quite
far - above the Red Sea or Saudi Arabia - or it might explode and disappear sooner."
If it disintegrates all at once, it would produce a bright flash of light and a loud sonic boom,
says Chesley.
This space rock is so small it is unlikely to cause any damage. "The only concern is that [the
explosions] might be interpreted as something else, that is man-made explosions. Thus in this case,
the earlier the public worldwide is aware that this is a natural phenomenon, which involves no risk,
the better," Milani's team wrote in a popular astronomy listserv.
Impact probability
The object's discovery is a reminder that larger and potentially more dangerous rocks might also be
on a collision course with Earth.
Milani and Chesley are members of the only two groups in the world that calculate the probability
that a given space rock will hit the Earth. They both say that they are delighted at how quickly
this meteorite was determined to be on a collision course with Earth - since it was only discovered
at about 0630 GMT on Monday.
"For us, [we feel] satisfaction because our computation worked and because this kind of accident -
which is without any risk that anybody [would be] hurt - will make people more aware of the fact
that something has to be done about asteroids in case a bigger one arrives," Milani told New
Scientist.
"The fact that we're able to make this prediction proves the system's working," says Chesley. "These
sized objects are not the ones we're most concerned about - there are tens of thousands of much
larger objects that could cause real damage on the ground that are still yet to be found."
Despite the advanced warning, there is probably too little time to mount a mission to observe the
atmospheric impact from an aeroplane, as sometimes happens during known meteor showers, says Milani.
"But now that this is out in the public, anybody who has a telescope is going to be pointing it in
that direction," Chesley says.
Jan Rasmussen