A scene from Don’t Look Up, in which astronomers try to warn the world about a comet heading for Earth NIKO TAVERNISE/NETFLIX
Earth could save itself from the threat of a devastating asteroid or comet impact with just a short window to act, according to new research.
Netflix鈥檚 recent science-fiction blockbuster Don鈥檛 Look Up depicts a scenario where astronomers discover a 10-kilometre-wide comet set to collide with Earth in six months. The film charts their efforts to warn the world of impending doom and convince politicians to take the necessary action to avert catastrophe.
Although the story is intended as an allegory for climate change, and at the University of California, Santa Barbara, wondered if such a scenario would be survivable in the real world. 鈥淚t looks possible,鈥 says Lubin. 鈥淚t looks like you could do it.鈥
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Given a timescale to act of several years, the preferred strategy would be to deflect the incoming object. But to stop an asteroid or comet of this size in just six months, Lubin and Cohen found that we would instead have to use nuclear devices to 鈥渄isassemble鈥 the object. They suggest this would be doable with less than 10 per cent of the world鈥檚 current nuclear arsenal.
The nuclear devices would need to be equipped on 1000 javelin-shaped penetrators, which could be launched on one of two super-rockets that are currently in development: NASA鈥檚 Space Launch System or SpaceX鈥檚 reusable Starship vehicle, both expected to launch on their first test flights to space in the coming months.
The launch would have to occur five months before the asteroid or comet was due to hit, giving us just a month to prepare. 鈥淵ou have to be ready. You can鈥檛 wait,鈥 says Lubin.
The penetrators would then strike a month before the impact date, exploding in concentric rings from the outer edge of the asteroid or comet towards its centre. That would give us the greatest chance of blasting it into small-enough fragments that would be mostly pushed out of Earth鈥檚 path.
鈥淲ill any of them hit? Probably,鈥 says Lubin. 鈥淏ut if it鈥檚 a choice between everybody dying and some, you have to make some choices.鈥
, the acting head of the European Space Agency鈥檚 planetary defence office, says the idea seems reasonable, but wonders if we would have enough time to act. 鈥淓ven if there are enough nuclear explosive devices, you鈥檇 still need to get them up on a rocket in four weeks,鈥 he says. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 see how that can happen.鈥
Thankfully, our best surveillance efforts suggest we won鈥檛 need such a call to arms any time soon. 鈥淭here鈥檚 nothing that we are worried about for at least the next 100 years,鈥 says at the University of Glasgow, UK, 鈥渂ut it鈥檚 always cool to read these kinds of things.鈥
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