China working on a new way to detect asteroids that threaten Earth

An array of 20 radio antennas will detect asteroids travelling between the Sun and the Earth

Adam Smith
Monday 18 July 2022 08:09 EDT
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An artist’s conception of an asteroid passing close to Earth
An artist’s conception of an asteroid passing close to Earth (Getty Images/iStockphoto)

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A Chinese university is building an array of 20 radar antennas in order to detect asteroids that could collide with the Earth.

Each antenna at the Beijing Institute of Technology’s facility, which is codenamed ‘China Fuyan’, will have a diameter of 25 to 30 meters and observe asteroids within a 150 million kilometer range of our planet – approximately the same distance between the Earth and the Sun.

Currently two antennas have been constructed so far, with testing set to take place in September.

The project will has set out to meet China’s requirements for near-Earth defences, as well as the general study of asteroids, Long Teng, president of the Beijing Institute of Technology, told Global Times.

It could also be used to track debris in Earth’s orbit, which has been rising over time and could keep humanity trapped on the planet in a worst-case scenario.

There is a significant chance someone will be killed by a rocket falling to Earth in the next decade, scientists have warned, as the build-up of detritus gets worse.

There were approximately 21,000 objects in orbit around the Earth, and of these about 5,000 were operational satellites in 2021. Now, however, it is estimated there are more than 128 million objects smaller than one centimetre around the planet which have caused craft like the International Space Station to take evasive action.

China has been developing asteroid monitoring defence systems for some time, with one expected to be tested in 2025. This would catalogue asteroids that could pose a threat to Earth, with the CNSA then sending a craft to divert it from its path.

Researchers from the CNSA have proposed launching 23 Long March 5 rockets to practise diverting space debris from hitting Earth.

The probability of an asteroid colliding with Earth is low but one, the 78 billion kilogram Bennu, has been targeted for investigation, due to the 1-in-2700 risk it could hit the planet.

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