By MICHAEL D. LEMONICK
Astronomers have good news, better news and some bad
news about an asteroid known as 2007 WD5. The good news is that this
164-ft.-wide chunk of speeding space rock, discovered in November in an
ongoing search for potential threats to Earth, won't hit our planet any time
in the foreseeable future. The better news — for eager space-watchers — is
that the asteroid, currently about halfway between Earth and Mars, has a
plausible chance of hitting the Red Planet at the end of January. If it does,
astronomers will be treated to an unprecedented sight.
It will not be visible with domestic
telescopes or the naked eye.
The chances of an impact being seen with large terrestrial telescopes are
greater than usual because Mars is currently very close to Earth. On Tuesday,
the planet was just 55 million miles away, the closest it will be until 2016.
Mars is currently the brightest object in the night sky after the Moon. you
can see Mars by naked eye in East direction and can be clearly seen after 8pm
to 5 AM
If 2007 WD5, which is about 100 meters in diameter, does strike Mars on
January 30, it would cause an explosion equivalent to several megatonnes of
TNT
The event itself, however, will have plenty of
precedent. The craters that pock the surface of Mars, the Moon, Mercury and
other Solar System bodies come from about four billion years' worth of this
sort of thing. Earth has had plenty of collisions too; it's just that erosion,
continental drift and vegetation have erased or hidden most of them. Not all,
though: Meteor Crater, in Arizona, was blasted out some 50,000 years ago by an
asteroid about the same size as 2007 WD5. A much bigger object, a few miles
across, is thought by many scientists to be the reason the dinosaurs died out
some 65 million years ago.
If 2007 WD5 does smack into Mars, every telescope on
Earth will be pointed in that direction — just as they were in 1994 when Comet
Shoemaker-Levy 9 crashed into Jupiter. In that case, the comet broke up while
it was still in orbit, so astronomers watched nearly two dozen individual
impacts. But Jupiter is made mostly of thick clouds, so there was no lasting
scar, and because it lies so far from Earth, the event wasn't quite as
spectacular as this one promises to be. Asteroid 2007 WD5 should release some
3 megatons of energy if it slams into solid ground near Mars' equator, and
orbiting satellites will show the aftermath with crystal clarity.
Finally, the bad news: 2007 WD5 has only
a 1-in-75 chance of actually hitting Mars, which means astronomers would be
wise to be pessimistic. But the possibility of impact calls
been convinced it was a flying saucer
that somehow made it across trillions of miles of interstellar space safely,
only to blow up above Russia.) The scientific explanation would account for
the aerial explosion, and also the fact that no crater has been found.
Except that now maybe it has. An Italian team has
measured seismic waves reflecting off a high-density spot in the bottom of the
suspiciously crater-shaped Lake Cheko, which lies close to the event's ground
zero. It could be a piece of the original object — and finding it could help
investigators understand exactly what happened a century ago.
If they find a burned-out flying-saucer engine, all bets
are off.
to mind a loosely related
incident that occurred almost exactly 100 years ago, when something exploded
above the Tunguska region of Siberia, flattening trees in a 25-mile radius,
their trunks pointing outward from the epicenter of the blast. Scientists are
pretty sure it was a comet or asteroid — about the same size as 2007 WD5, as
it happens — that disintegrated from its own shock wave as it plowed through
the atmosphere. (UFO enthusiasts have long