http://www.abqtrib.com/archives/news04/031904_news_asteroid.shtml

Telescope tracking asteroids 

Watch at White Sands would provide warning of object approaching Earth

By Sue Vorenberg 
Albuquerque Tribune (New Mexico)
March 19, 2004

Tucked away on the corner of White Sands Missile Range is a telescope 
that's found more than 50 percent of all known asteroids, its operators 
say.

If the sky were to start falling - in the form of a giant asteroid 
crashing into the Earth - that telescope would almost certainly be the 
first to see it. It might even give the world some advanced warning, so 
scientists could find a way to prevent the destruction, said Grant Stokes, 
an astronomer.

"If you're thinking about these large objects in space what we don't want 
to do is find one that's already on its way to Earth," Stokes said. "What 
we want to do is find all the potential ones that could get to Earth and 
catalogue them all so we'll know ahead of time."

On Monday, the telescope - operated by the Massachusetts Institute of 
Technology - found a 100-foot-long asteroid that came within 26,500 miles 
of Earth on Thursday afternoon. That object, called 2004 FH, will go into 
a larger National Aeronautics and Space Administration database of 
near-earth asteroids. NASA hopes to complete the database in 2008, Stokes 
said.

"In elementary school we learn that the solar system is a very pristine 
place, with planets circling the sun," Stokes said. "In reality it's a 
very messy place, with a lot of material floating around. Asteroids are 
common, but it's not the first thing I worry about in the morning. The 
Earth is small and the solar system is very big. Impacts are actually 
pretty rare."

The 2004 FH asteroid is the closest near-miss object that astronomers 
have ever seen, Stokes said.

"Smaller objects hit the Earth all the time, but this is large enough to 
pay attention to," he said. "If it hit it wouldn't hurt the entire planet, 
but it would cause significant local damage."

If the object hit Earth it could level about 100 square miles of forest, 
much like the famous Tunguska impact of 1908, which leveled a similar 
amount of terrain in Siberia.

The university chose to put the telescope in New Mexico because of the 
state's famous dark skies, said Roger Sudbury, a scientist at Lincoln 
Laboratories, the MIT-owned facility that operates the telescope.

"You get a lot of good observation nights in New Mexico," Sudbury said. 
"Our site isn't at high altitude like many telescopes are, but there 
aren't many rainy nights and there isn't much ambient light there. It's 
a good site for observation."

Both Sudbury and Stokes split time in Massachusetts and New Mexico, they 
said.

MIT originally designed the telescope, built in 1998, for the Air Force 
to detect satellites. NASA started using it a few years ago as part of 
its Near Earth Object Program, Stokes said.

"We find about 70 percent of all new asteroids each year," he said. 
"There's probably about 100,000 objects flying around that are about 
this size that could get close to Earth."

The MIT device - the Lincoln Near Earth Asteroid Research (LINEAR) 
telescope - is different from other telescopes in the way its mirror 
is shaped and in how it looks at objects, Sudbury said.

"In some ways it works a lot like a digital camera," he said. "What we 
do with it is record multiple images over time. While we do that, we 
register stars in the background. Any objects we find that move between 
those stars are likely either satellites or asteroids."

Using the technology to map out asteroids could one day save lives, Stokes 
added.

"It's a real international resource," Stokes said. "The data we take in 
New Mexico provides the science community with a unique set of data that 
the whole world uses.  It helps lots of people."

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