Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1714973 Acta Astronautica 2013 9 Pages PDF
Abstract

Recent studies by the US National Research Council identify nuclear explosives as the only current technology able to deflect large asteroids (those exceeding 500 m in diameter) or to mitigate impacts of smaller bodies when the warning time is short. Previous work predicts that either a standoff burst or a very low-yield surface burst is easily capable of deflecting a large (1 km) asteroid without fragmentation. Alternatively, large near-surface or just sub-surface bursts can sufficiently disrupt and disperse smaller bodies (300 m) to ensure that large fractions (in excess of 99.99%) miss the Earth entirely. Even for very short warning times (less than a month), more than 99.5% of a body′s mass can be deflected off of an Earth-bound trajectory. However, successfully deflecting a small body, while avoiding fragmentation, becomes a challenging problem when the required kinetic energy increment is a substantial fraction of the body′s potential. This paper addresses the challenge of preventing the production of substantial low-speed debris while deflecting small bodies with an impulsive method.

► Standoff nuclear bursts can defend against Earth-bound asteroids. ► We modeled the effects of standoff nuclear bursts on Apophis-sized asteroids. ► We examined the effects of porosity on the deflection of asteroids. ► Higher porosity lowered the risk of fragmentation when deflecting via standoff burst.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Engineering Aerospace Engineering
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