• Home
  • Podcast
    • Specials
  • Interviews
  • Movie Reviews
  • TV Reviews
  • DVD Reviews
  • Columns
  • News
    • TV News
    • Film News
    • DVD News
    • Comics News
    • Online Entertainment News
    • Music News
    • Book News
    • Space News

Slice of SciFi

This is How We Geek Out: Interviews, Reviews & More

  • Writers, After Dark
  • The Babylon Podcast
  • Slice of SciFi TV
  • Charlie Jade Verse
  • Contact Us
    • About Us

SCI-FI to SCI-FACT: The Asteroid Tractor

February 9, 2006 By S. K. Sloan Leave a Comment

An asteroid as big as a stadium is heading toward Earth. The impact could obliterate an area the size of Delaware. What to do? The stock answer usually involves nuclear missiles, robotic impactors or some other aggressive technique. But such methods may well fall short. Even after the asteroid was blown up, large chunks could still strike Earth.

Now NASA astronauts Edward Lu and Stanley Love have come up with a much gentler solution. They argue that the killer asteroid could be eased off its collision course simply by applying gravity.

Their plan calls for an unmanned spacecraft called a “gravitational tractor” to hover near the asteroid for a period of months or years. The small gravitational force exerted on the asteroid by the vehicle—perhaps as little as a quarter of a pound—would be enough to nudge the rock into a slightly different orbit, averting a crack-up. “You just want to hang there and let the spacecraft gradually adjust the asteroid’s course,” Love says.

For example, to deflect a 700-foot asteroid, the astronauts envision a 20-ton nuclear-powered spacecraft shaped like a pendulum, with the heaviest part closest to the asteroid. This arrangement will produce the greatest gravitational force and will also help keep the ship stable as it hovers next to the asteroid. But the first real-world test might involve a much bigger asteroid known as 99942 Apophis, which is between 1,000 and 1,300 feet long and weighs perhaps 50 million tons. There is a very small chance—from 1 in 5,000 to 1 in 10,000—that this massive rock will hit Earth in 2036. Love and Lu say that if a gravitational tractor were sent up before 2029, when the asteroid will make a close pass to Earth, the job would be relatively easy, requiring just a one-ton spacecraft to make the necessary small adjustment in Apophis’s trajectory. “It’s like changing the angle of a bank shot in pool,” Love says. “A little change early on has a large effect down the line.”

Russian Federal Space Agency; U.N. Office for Outer Space Affairs; JSR Space Report; Celestrak;

The conceptual “tractor” is a 65-foot-long spacecraft that hovers above an asteroid, using its gravitational force to tug the rock out of harm’s way.

Source: Popular Science, Written by: David Kohn

Filed Under: Space News, Technology News Tagged With: Sci-Fi to Sci-Fact

About S. K. Sloan

Samuel K. Sloan's love of Star Trek brought him to Slice of SciFi, where he was Managing Editor from 2005-2011, and returned from 2013-2014 before retiring once again from scifi news gathering.

Related Posts

Eternal Sunshine
SciFi to SciFact: “Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind”
Sci-Fi to Sci-Fact: Skype Translator: Prelude to Universal Translator?
Sci-Fi to Sci-Fact: 3D Replication of Tissue

Generic selectors
Exact matches only
Search in title
Search in content
Post Type Selectors
Search in posts

Slice

Follow Slice of SciFi

  • youtube
  • bluesky
  • twitter
  • facebook

Listen to Slice of SciFi

  • iheartradio
  • pocketcasts
  • playerfm

Subscribe to Podcast

Apple PodcastsSpotifyiHeartRadioPodchaserPodcast IndexTuneInRSS

  • Movie & TV Reviews

Recent Comments

  • Kristen on Journal Now Interview With “Surface” Co-Creator: “I was just talking about this in the car this morning, not for the first time. I grew up watching…”
  • Xander Rohrig on Check Out the Cupcake Games: “its dig dug”
  • Curt Myers on 4K Review: “Dogma” 25th Anniversary Special Edition brings a lost classic home again: “The best the movie has looked. It’s dialogue heavy so the Atmos track is rarely used. When it comes in…”
  • Summer Brooks on “FATE: The Winx Saga” writer Olivia Cuartero-Briggs talks adapting properties: “I requested it. I always get a little curious when TV shows or films get abandoned or canceled then continue…”
  • anh on “FATE: The Winx Saga” writer Olivia Cuartero-Briggs talks adapting properties: “Great interview! And it’s good that it clarifies some things. But this interview…. was it requested by the publisher or…”
Neil deGrasse Tyson Bill Nye

Slice of SciFi
415 Pisgah Church Rd #302
Greensboro NC 27455-2590
602-635-6976

Artwork:
Slice of SciFi galaxy spiral designed by Tim Callender

Theme Music:
Slice of SciFi music and themes
courtesy of Sci-Fried

Sister Sites:
Writers, After Dark
The Babylon Podcast
Charlie Jade Verse
Slice of SciFi TV

Slice

Copyright Slice of SciFi © 2005–2026 · WordPress · Log in