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The Truth About Asteroid Defense — What Bennu Taught Us We Don't Have

| 1 min read| By EuroBulletin24 briefing
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The Bennu mission revealed new details about the asteroid's composition and trajectory. Here is what we know about the threat and how prepared we actually are.

The OSIRIS-REx mission to Bennu and its sample return has produced scientific insights about asteroid composition and structure that are academically valuable and that also have a specific relevance to planetary defence — the field concerned with what humanity would do if a significant asteroid were found to be on a collision course with Earth.

Bennu's orbital mechanics have been calculated with extraordinary precision based on OSIRIS-REx's tracking data. The current assessment places Bennu's probability of Earth impact in the 2100-2200 timeframe at approximately 1 in 1750 — not negligible, and the most precisely characterized impact risk of any known asteroid. The data from OSIRIS-REx's proximity measurements has also refined understanding of the Yarkovsky effect — the small but cumulatively significant force that solar radiation exerts on rotating asteroids, altering their orbits over centuries.

The Bennu sample's composition data reveals that the asteroid's physical structure — a 'rubble pile' of loosely consolidated material rather than a solid rock — would respond differently to potential deflection attempts than a monolithic body. The DART mission's successful deflection demonstration of the Dimorphos asteroid in 2022 proved that kinetic impactor deflection works. The Bennu composition data suggests that a rubble pile asteroid like Bennu might respond differently — potentially absorbing more of the impactor's momentum in disruption of the pile rather than translating it into trajectory change.

What the Bennu research reveals about planetary defence gaps is specific: our detection capability for smaller objects (50-100 metres, capable of city-destroying impact) remains inadequate; our deflection methodology for rubble pile targets needs specific research investment that hasn't yet been funded; and the international coordination required for a multi-nation response to an identified threat has never been tested operationally.

The probability that Bennu specifically hits Earth is low. The probability that some asteroid will create a significant threat within the next century is higher than public awareness suggests, and our preparedness for that eventuality is less developed than it should be.

#asteroid#defense#bennu#planetary-defense#nasa#risk
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