Adventures of an asteroid hunter Carrie Nugent

I am holding something remarkably old.

It is older than any human artifact,

older than life on Earth,

older than the continents
and the oceans between them.

This was formed
over four billion years ago

in the earliest days of the solar system

while the planets were still forming.

This rusty lump of nickel and iron
may not appear special,

but when it is cut open …

you can see that it is different
from earthly metals.

This pattern reveals metallic crystals
that can only form out in space

where molten metal
can cool extremely slowly,

a few degrees every million years.

This was once part
of a much larger object,

one of millions left over
after the planets formed.

We call these objects asteroids.

Asteroids are our oldest
and most numerous cosmic neighbors.

This graphic shows near-Earth asteroids
orbiting around the Sun,

shown in yellow,

and swinging close to the Earth’s orbit,

shown in blue.

The sizes of the Earth, Sun and asteroids
have been greatly exaggerated

so you can see them clearly.

Teams of scientists across the globe
are searching for these objects,

discovering new ones every day,

steadily mapping near-Earth space.

Much of this work is funded by NASA.

I think of the search for these asteroids
as a giant public works project,

but instead of building a highway,
we’re charting outer space,

building an archive
that will last for generations.

These are the 1,556 near-Earth asteroids
discovered just last year.

And these are all of the known
near-Earth asteroids,

which at last count was 13,733.

Each one has been imaged, cataloged

and had its path
around the Sun determined.

Although it varies
from asteroid to asteroid,

the paths of most asteroids
can be predicted for dozens of years.

And the paths of some asteroids can be
predicted with incredible precision.

For example, scientists
at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory

predicted where the asteroid Toutatis
was going to be four years in advance

to within 30 kilometers.

In those four years,

Toutatis traveled 8.5 billion kilometers.

That’s a fractional precision

of 0.000000004.

(Laughter)

Now, the reason I have
this beautiful asteroid fragment

is because, like all neighbors,

asteroids sometimes drop by unexpectedly.

(Laughter)

Three years ago today,

a small asteroid exploded
over the city of Chelyabinsk, Russia.

That object was about 19 meters across,

or about as big as a convenience store.

Objects of this size hit the Earth
every 50 years or so.

66 million years ago,

a much larger object hit the Earth,

causing a massive extinction.

75 percent of plant
and animal species were lost,

including, sadly, the dinosaurs.

That object was
about 10 kilometers across,

and 10 kilometers is roughly
the cruising altitude of a 747 jet.

So the next time you’re in an airplane,

snag a window seat, look out
and imagine a rock so enormous

that resting on the ground,

it just grazes your wingtip.

It’s so wide that it takes your plane
one full minute to fly past it.

That’s the size of the asteroid
that hit the Earth.

It has only been within my lifetime

that asteroids have been considered
a credible threat to our planet.

And since then, there’s been
a focused effort underway

to discover and catalog these objects.

I am lucky enough
to be part of this effort.

I’m part of a team of scientists
that use NASA’s NEOWISE telescope.

Now, NEOWISE was not
designed to find asteroids.

It was designed to orbit the earth
and look far beyond our solar system

to seek out the coldest stars
and the most luminous galaxies.

And it did that very well
for its designed lifetime of seven months.

But today, six years later,
it’s still going.

We’ve repurposed it
to discover and study asteroids.

And although it’s
a wonderful little space robot,

these days it’s kind of like a used car.

The cryogen that used to refrigerate
its sensors is long gone,

so we joke that
its air-conditioning is broken.

It’s got 920 million miles
on the odometer,

but it still runs great

and reliably takes a photograph
of the sky every 11 seconds.

It’s taken 23 photos
since I began speaking to you.

One of the reasons NEOWISE is so valuable

is that it sees the sky
in the thermal infrared.

That means that instead of seeing
the sunlight that asteroids reflect,

NEOWISE sees the heat that they emit.

This is a vital capability
since some asteroids are as dark as coal

and can be difficult or impossible
to spot with other telescopes.

But all asteroids, light or dark,
shine brightly for NEOWISE.

Astronomers are using
every technique at their disposal

to discover and study asteroids.

In 2010, a historic milestone was reached.

The community, together, discovered
over 90 percent of asteroids

bigger than one kilometer across –

objects capable
of massive destruction to Earth.

But the job’s not done yet.

An object 140 meters or bigger
could decimate a medium-sized country.

So far, we’ve only found
25 percent of those.

We must keep searching the sky
for near-Earth asteroids.

We are the only species
able to understand calculus

or build telescopes.

We know how to find these objects.

This is our responsibility.

If we found a hazardous asteroid
with significant early warning,

we could nudge it out of the way.

Unlike earthquakes, hurricanes
or volcanic eruptions,

an asteroid impact
can be precisely predicted

and prevented.

What we need to do now
is map near-Earth space.

We must keep searching the sky.

Thank you.

(Applause)

我手里拿着一件非常古老的东西。

它比任何人工制品都

古老,比地球上的生命

还要古老,比大陆
和它们之间的海洋还要古老。

这是
40 亿

年前太阳系早期

形成的,当时行星仍在形成。

这块生锈的镍铁块
可能看起来并不特别,

但切开它……

你可以看到它
与地球上的金属不同。

这种模式揭示了金属
晶体只能

在熔融金属
可以极其缓慢地冷却的空间中

形成,每百万年冷却几度。

这曾经
是一个更大物体的一部分,

是行星形成后剩下的数百万个物体之一

我们称这些天体为小行星。

小行星是我们最古老
、数量最多的宇宙邻居。

这张图显示了
围绕太阳运行的近地小行星

,以黄色显示,

并在靠近地球轨道的地方摆动

,以蓝色显示。

地球、太阳和小行星的大小
被大大夸大了,

因此您可以清楚地看到它们。

全球科学家团队
正在寻找这些天体,每天都在

发现新天体,并

稳步绘制近地空间地图。

这项工作的大部分由美国宇航局资助。

我认为寻找这些小行星
是一项巨大的公共工程项目,

但我们不是建造高速公路,
而是绘制外层空间图,

建立
一个可以世代相传的档案。

这些是去年刚刚发现的 1,556 颗近地小行星

这些都是已知的
近地小行星

,最后统计为 13,733 颗。

每一个都被成像、编目

并确定了它
围绕太阳的路径。

尽管它
因小行星而异,

但大多数小行星的路径
可以预测数十年。

一些小行星的路径可以
以令人难以置信的精确度预测。

例如,
喷气推进实验室的科学家提前 4 年

预测小行星 Toutatis 的位置

在 30 公里以内。

在这四年里,

Toutatis 行驶了 85 亿公里。

这是 0.000000004 的小数精度

(笑声)

现在,我之所以拥有
这个美丽的小行星碎片,

是因为,就像所有的邻居一样,

小行星有时会意外地掉下来。

(笑声)

三年前的今天,

一颗小行星
在俄罗斯车里雅宾斯克市上空爆炸。

那个物体大约有 19 米宽

,大约和便利店一样大。

这种大小的物体
每 50 年左右撞击地球一次。

6600 万年前,

一个更大的天体撞击地球,

导致大灭绝。

75% 的
动植物物种消失了,

其中包括令人遗憾的恐龙。

该物体
的直径约为 10 公里

,10 公里大致相当于
一架 747 喷气式飞机的巡航高度。

所以下次你在飞机上时,

找一个靠窗的座位,向外看
,想象一块巨大的岩石

搁在地上,

它只是擦过你的翼尖。

它是如此之宽,以至于您的飞机
需要整整一分钟才能飞过它。

那是撞击地球的小行星的大小

只有在我有生之年

,小行星才被认为
对我们的星球构成了可信的威胁。

从那时起,人们一直
在集中

精力发现和分类这些物体。

我很幸运
能够参与这项工作。

我是使用 NASA NEOWISE 望远镜的科学家团队的一员

现在,NEOWISE 并不是
为寻找小行星而设计的。

它旨在绕地球运行,
并远眺我们的太阳系,

以寻找最冷的恒星
和最明亮的星系。

它在
设计寿命为 7 个月的情况下做得很好。

但六年后的今天,
它仍在继续。

我们已将其重新
用于发现和研究小行星。

虽然它是
一个很棒的小型太空机器人,

但现在它有点像二手车。

用于冷藏
其传感器的冷冻剂早已不复存在,

所以我们开玩笑说它
的空调坏了。

它的里程表有 9.2 亿英里

但它仍然运行良好,

并且每 11 秒可靠地拍摄一张
天空照片。

自从我开始和你说话以来,已经拍了 23 张照片

NEOWISE 如此有价值的原因之一

是它可以
在热红外中看到天空。

这意味着
,NEOWISE 没有看到小行星反射的阳光,而是看到

了它们发出的热量。

这是一项至关重要的能力,
因为一些小行星像煤一样黑,

用其他望远镜很难或不可能发现。

但所有的小行星,无论是亮的还是暗的,都
为 NEOWISE 闪耀着光芒。

天文学家正在使用
他们掌握的每一种技术

来发现和研究小行星。

2010年,达到了一个历史性的里程碑。

该社区共同发现
了超过 90% 的

直径超过一公里的小行星——

能够
对地球造成大规模破坏的物体。

但这项工作还没有完成。

一个 140 米或更大的物体
可以摧毁一个中等国家。

到目前为止,我们只发现了其中的
25%。

我们必须继续在天空中
寻找近地小行星。

我们是唯一
能够理解微积分

或建造望远镜的物种。

我们知道如何找到这些对象。

这是我们的责任。

如果我们发现了一颗
具有重要预警的危险小行星,

我们可以将它推开。

与地震、飓风
或火山爆发不同

,小行星撞击
可以精确预测

和预防。

我们现在需要做的
是映射近地空间。

我们必须继续寻找天空。

谢谢你。

(掌声)