Space
Rock Misses Mars, Barely
By
Jeremy Hsu, Staff Writer
posted:
30 January 2008 06:42 am ET
An
asteroid once thought to be on a collision course with Mars passed the Red Planet
today without incident.
Astronomers
first estimated that asteroid 2007 WD5 had as high as a 3.6 percent chance of
striking the planet. Newer observations kept lowering the odds for the 164-foot
space rock until Jan. 9, when NASA's Near-Earth Object (NEO) program office effectively
ruled out chances of an impact.
"Mars
sees these kinds of near-miss encounters every ten or twenty years, but the impact
rate for asteroids this size is about once in a thousand years," said Steve
Chesley, an astronomer at the Jet Propulsion Lab in Pasadena, California.
Astronomers
had hoped the fleet of spacecraft orbiting Mars would get a chance to observe
the asteroid plowing into the Martian surface. The subsequent crater would have
roughly equaled the size of the Meteor Crater that formed in northern Arizona
50,000 years ago, with a 0.5-mile diameter. Such an impact would have also allowed
scientists to study the dust cloud from the impact.
"We
were hoping for a spectacular show to reveal a lot," Chesley said. "We've
actually never seen a significant impact on a terrestrial planet."
Mars
is a smaller and harder target for space rocks to hit when compared with Earth,
but about five times as many asteroids cross the Martian orbit, according to Chesley.
2007 WD5's path around the sun ranges from just outside Earth's orbit to the outer
edge of the asteroid belt between Mars and Jupiter, but will not impact with either
Mars or Earth in the next century, JPL researchers said.
The
asteroid missed Mars by a distance of approximately 6.5 Mars radii.
Similar
near misses occur with Earth. And similarly, astronomers sometimes give odds on
a possible impact and then, with further observations, reduce the odds to zero.
In
fact, the Mars flyby occurred a day after a 500-foot asteroid flew by Earth at
a distance somewhat greater than from the Earth to the Moon.
Chesley
and other astronomers considered having one of the Martian rovers eyeball the
passing 2007 WD5, but judged the task too difficult for the robotic explorers.
None of the orbiting spacecraft turned their cameras or other equipment on the
passing rock, either.
"After
we knew it was going to miss, it's really a pretty ordinary asteroid cruising
around the solar system," Chesley said.