24 May 2016

Killer asteroids

Kenneth Chang has an article (with its usual unbloggable video) in The New York Times about killer asteroids:
More than fourteen thousand known asteroids zip through Earth’s neighborhood. They will all miss Earth in the coming decades.
But hundreds of thousands more have not yet been discovered, and whether any of those are on course to slam into our planet, no one knows. So finding and tracking all the asteroids that could cross Earth’s path would allow officials to issue warnings and potentially provide time to deflect dangerous ones.
The community of scientists contemplating such doomsday possibilities is small and usually cordial, at least until Nathan P. Myhrvold barged in. Once the chief technologist at Microsoft, Dr. Myhrvold moved on to other endeavors like a six-volume, 2,438-page compendium of cooking knowledge that has been celebrated by chefs. (A sequel, about baking, is in the works.) He has also become a statistics scold of scientists.
His latest target is NASA, in a squabble over data from the Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer (WISE) spacecraft.
WISE, launched in 2009, snapped images of three-quarters of a billion stars, galaxies, and other celestial objects, including the heat emissions of asteroids.
An offshoot called Neowise used the heat data to calculate the size and reflectivity of over a hundred and fifty thousand asteroids. Dr. Myhrvold contends that the Neowise analysis is deeply flawed. “The bad news is, it’s all basically wrong,” he said. “Unfortunately for a lot of it, it’s never going to be as accurate as they had hoped.”
He submitted his own analysis of the Neowise results to the journal Icarus.
Dr. Myhrvold isn’t arguing that NASA has overlooked dangers from the known asteroids. But he does question whether scientists know as much as they think they do. He has also zeroed in on a proposed space-based telescope with a price tag of more than half a billion dollars, the Near-Earth Object Camera, or Neocam, a project headed by some of the same scientists whose work he is second-guessing.
Most of the millions of asteroids are found between the orbits of Mars and Jupiter, but some dip closer to the sun. There is no doubt that some will hit Earth someday.
The bigger the asteroid, the greater the potential cataclysm. The reflectivity of the surface, what astronomers call albedo, tells how easily it can be detected.
“From the practical perspective of finding asteroids,” Dr. Myhrvold said, “it’s really important that we know the distribution of diameters and the distribution of albedos.”
According to NASA’s scientists, the estimates of asteroid diameters made by Neowise are often within ten percent of the actual size. But Dr. Myhrvold says the uncertainties are much greater, more than a hundred percent in many cases.
Space agency officials disagree. “He’s a very smart man,” said Lindley Johnson, who oversees NASA’s efforts to protect the planet from space rocks. “But that doesn’t make him an expert in everything.”
Dr. Johnson said NASA experts had pointed out errors and that Dr. Myhrvold had not fixed them. “It’s overly simplistic, and he makes some assumptions that are not valid,” Dr. Johnson said.
Other scientists say that Dr. Myhrvold’s criticisms have merit. “I do think he’s performed a really very useful service,” said Alan W. Harris, a senior research scientist at the Space Science Institute, “to do the error analysis more carefully and alert people that you shouldn’t just take some of the data out of the WISE table and just assume they’re gospel.”
But, even if Dr. Myhrvold is correct, Dr. Harris said the Neowise data “has good enough validity to be useful for most purposes.”
Dr. Myhrvold is not an astronomer. He had never done research on asteroids. He is often vilified as a “patent troll”, because Intellectual Ventures, the company he founded after leaving Microsoft in 1999, acquires patents and extracts licensing fees from other companies.
During his paleontological endeavors (another hobby) Dr. Myhrvold challenged research by a Florida State University professor, Gregory M. Erickson, about the growth rates of dinosaurs. In a 2013 paper, Dr. Myhrvold described the perceived statistical wrongs and stopped just short of accusing Dr. Erickson of manipulating the data.
Corrections have been appended to several of Dr. Erickson’s papers, including two in Nature. Dr. Erickson and his colleagues maintain that the mistakes did not alter their conclusions. Florida State cleared Dr. Erickson of wrongdoing after an inquiry.
“Having somebody like Nathan having a different perspective and different background coming in and looking at it with fresh eyes, I think there’s nothing wrong with that,” said Kristina Curry Rogers, a vertebrate paleontologist at Macalester College in Minnesota, who was an author on Dr. Erickson’s Nature papers. “It makes us all think.”
Dr. Myhrvold was drawn into asteroid research when the B612 Foundation, a nonprofit organization that advocates planetary defense efforts, asked him to contribute money for Sentinel, a privately financed half-billion-dollar asteroid-finding spacecraft.
“What they didn’t know is that I had been interested in killer asteroids for a long time,” Dr. Myhrvold said. After all, an asteroid slamming into Earth is believed to have brought the age of dinosaurs to an end 66 million years ago.
But Dr. Myhrvold learned of several other efforts, including NASA’s Neocam, which would cost about a half-billion dollars (plus the rocket to launch it), and the Large Synoptic Survey Telescope, a ground-based observatory already under construction in Chile. Each group offered computer simulations of how many unseen asteroids would be spotted, making different assumptions.
In a paper published in March of 2016 in The Publications of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific, Dr. Myhrvold took a simpler approach to provide an apples-to-apples comparison. He looked at the volume of space that each telescope could observe, then calculated what fraction of unseen asteroids would pass through that space.
“I thought it all looked quite reasonable,” said Steven R. Chesley, a senior research scientist at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, California. “Nathan definitely brings a fresh approach.”
Dr. Myhrvold concluded that the ground-based telescope in Chile, a seven-hundred-million-dollar collaboration of the United States Department of Energy, the National Science Foundation, and other organizations, could find up to ninety percent of near-Earth asteroids if it spent more time looking low in the sky, closer to the Earth’s horizon.
Zeljko Ivezic, the telescope’s project scientist, said the trade-off would be a two-year postponement in completing its survey of the rest of the cosmos and an additional cost of a hundred million dollars, and telescope officials have asked NASA whether it would help pay for that.
Ultimately, Dr. Myhrvold, who became wealthy from his Microsoft days, decided not to donate money to B612. He has also not given any money to the Large Synoptic Survey Telescope, which has received some private financing from Bill Gates, his former boss at Microsoft.
In writing the paper published in March of 2016, Dr. Myhrvold talked with people working on the different projects, including Amy Mainzer, the principal investigator for Neocam and Neowise.
Dr. Myhrvold said that Dr. Mainzer argued that a ground-based telescope could not detect asteroids within Earth’s orbit, because they would be too close to the horizon. That seemed strange to Dr. Myhrvold, because even amateurs can easily spot celestial objects far inside Earth’s orbit, like Venus, several million miles closer to the sun than EarthDr. Myhrvold said Dr. Mainzer responded that large telescopes were not designed to point that close to the ground. But the one in Chile is, he noted.
“I was happy he pointed out there was a misconception that LSST could not see within Earth's orbit,” said Dr. Ivezic, a professor at the University of Washington.
Dr. Chesley of NASA is coordinating a more detailed analysis of the telescope’s asteroid-finding prowess, with preliminary findings expected in late summer.
In recent presentations, NASA officials have portrayed Neocam more as a complement than a competitor. “It’s a team sport,” Dr. Johnson said. “There isn’t any one system that is going to provide us all the data we need.”
NASA declined to make Dr. Mainzer available for an interview. Responding to written questions, she said the Neowise team stood behind the findings, and that the results had been validated by independent observations and other researchers.
It struck Dr. Myhrvold that the albedo calculations of the Neocam team violated a basic tenet of physics known as Kirchhoff’s law of thermal radiation, which says shinier objects radiate less heat.
A simple demonstration of that, Dr. Myhrvold said, is the shiny chrome cooking surface of a restaurant hibachi grill. A dark grill surface would bathe diners in uncomfortable waves of heat. The Neocam models failed to take into account the effects of reflected sunlight, he said.
He then took a closer look at Neowise, too. One aspect Dr. Myhrvold found curious was that in more than a hundred instances, the Neowise team reported asteroid diameters that matched exactly what had previously been determined by other methods like radar measurements and spacecraft flybys. “I think it’s a pretty strong smoking gun that something is wrong,” he said.
For her part, Dr. Mainzer said the asteroids with exact measurement matches were used for calibration and thus the values were set to those that had been previously observed.
The asteroid community, while small, includes two unrelated scientists named Alan William Harris. The Dr. Harris at the Space Science Institute, who is 71, is known as Al the Elder, while Al the Younger, 64, is a German Aerospace Center scientist who developed the computer model used by the Neowise scientists.
The younger Dr. Harris agrees that Dr. Myhrvold has raised a valid point about Kirchhoff’s Law and that a closer look at the Neowise analysis would be fruitful. Earlier satellites looked at longer wavelengths where reflected sunlight was less of a problem.
Still, he disapproves of Dr. Myhrvold’s scolding tone. “There’s very much a schoolteacher attitude about it,” he said.
Dr. Myhrvold insists he has no vendetta against the Neowise scientists. But, he added: “I don’t think it’s unduly mean of me to point out their data is irreproducible.”
Kirchhoff’s Law could again come into play with Neocam, which would make observations at fairly short infrared wavelengths. Neocam is one of five lower-cost missions under consideration, and NASA is to approve one or two of them in September, aiming for launch in the 2020s.
Dr. Mainzer deferred answering some follow-up questions, saying those issues would be best addressed by the referees reviewing Dr. Myhrvold’s paper. “We believe at this point it’s best to allow the process of peer review, the foundation of the scientific process, to move forward,” she wrote.
Rico says that, one of these days, we're gonna wish we'd figured out how to deal with these things before one lands and does to us what one did to the dinosaurs...

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