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Asteroid 2023 NT1: A Cautionary Tale
- Publication Year :
- 2023
-
Abstract
- We investigate a variety of short warning time, terminal mitigation scenarios via fragmentation for a hypothetical impact of asteroid 2023 NT1, a Near-Earth Object (NEO) that was discovered on July 15, 2023, two days after its closest approach to Earth on July 13. The asteroid passed by Earth within ~0.25 lunar distances with a closest approach distance of ~10$^{5}$ km and speed of 11.27 km/s. Its size remains largely uncertain, with an estimated diameter range of 26 - 58 m and probable diameter estimate (weighted by the NEO size frequency distribution) of 34 m (JPL Sentry, September 12, 2023). The asteroid approached Earth from the direction of the Sun, as did both the Chelyabinsk asteroid in 2013 and comet NEOWISE in 2021. As a result, 2023 NT1 remained undetected until after its closest approach. If it had been on a collision course, it would have had an impact energy of ~1.5 Mt (assuming a spherical asteroid with the probable diameter estimate of 34 m, 2.6 g/cm$^{3}$ uniform density, and impact speed of 15.59 km/s). 2023 NT1 represents a threat that could have caused significant local damage (~3x Chelyabinsk airburst energy). We utilize the PI ("Pulverize It") method for planetary defense to model potential mitigation scenarios of an object like 2023 NT1 through simulations of hypervelocity asteroid disruption and atmospheric ground effects for the case of a terminal defense mode. Simulations suggest that PI is an effective multimodal approach for planetary defense that can operate in extremely short interdiction modes (with intercepts as short as hours prior to impact), in addition to long interdiction time scales with months to years of warning. Our simulations support the proposition that threats like 2023 NT1 can be effectively mitigated with intercepts of one day (or less) prior to impact, yielding minimal to no ground damage, using modest resources and existing technologies.
- Subjects :
- Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics
Subjects
Details
- Database :
- arXiv
- Publication Type :
- Report
- Accession number :
- edsarx.2310.13112
- Document Type :
- Working Paper