CN China Sets Up 'Planetary Defense' Unit Over 2032 Asteroid Threat - The asteroid is being monitored by multiple space agencies globally, and various methods of averting a collision have been proposed.

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China has established a "planetary defense" team to counter the threat of an asteroid that could hit Earth in 2032.

As concerns grow regarding the threat from space, Beijing's State Administration of Science, Technology and Industry for National Defense has begun recruiting workers for its defense team, according to the South China Morning Post.

Newsweek contacted NASA and the Chinese Embassy in the U.K. for comment via email outside normal business hours.

Why It Matters​

On Friday, the European Space Agency said the probability of asteroid 2024 YR4 hitting Earth in 2032 was 2.2 percent, placing it at the top of the agency's risk list.

NASA has said the asteroid is the most dangerous space object near Earth. Though the chances of the asteroid making impact are small, space agencies around the world are preparing for its potential arrival

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Two staff members at the Jiuquan Satellite Launch Center in the Gobi Desert in Inner Mongolia, China, on May 29, 2023.
Lidiya Stanchenko/Associated Press

What To Know​

China's State Administration of Science, Technology and Industry for National Defense has begun assembling a space defense team by posting recruitment listings for three available roles. One listing posted to WeChat said the center was recruiting graduates to study asteroid monitoring and create early warning methods.

Asteroid 2024 YR4 is estimated to be 40 to 90 meters (130 to 300 feet) wide and was initially discovered by the University of Hawaii's Institute of Astronomy in late December. Swiftly after its discovery, Beijing's agency posted the recruitment listings.

As it is scheduled to near Earth by 2032, the asteroid is being monitored by multiple space agencies globally, and various methods of averting a collision have been proposed.

The methods include using nuclear weapons to redirect the asteroid away from the planet or employing NASA's Double Asteroid Redirection Test, also known as the DART mission, which previously altered the course of an asteroid in 2022 by using kinetic impactors.

China's method of planetary defense would reportedly include crashing a DART-style spacecraft into the asteroid, bearing similarities to the U.S.'s DART mission, The Economist reported.

What People Are Saying​

Robin George Andrews, a science journalist, wrote on X, formerly Twitter: "The impact corridor (as it's known) is too wide right now, and the chances are too low, to talk about that. The red line here shows the possibilities (from D. Rankin). The damage mostly depends on the size of the asteroid, impact angle and location … An impact in a sparse desert or the middle of the ocean even on the larger end of the asteroid's size range (90m/300 feet) would be harmless. A direct hit on a city would be like a nuclear bomb hitting it."

He continued: "A 40m asteroid (smaller end) wouldn't make it to the ground, would explode mid-air and unleash an air blast that would knock over buildings and people and be extremely lethal. A 90m asteroid (larger end) might make it to the ground, make a crater, and emit a blast wave that would kill people for several miles away by damaging their internal organs through compressive force. People and buildings further afield will be violently knocked back."

What Happens Next​

The European Space Agency is providing regular updates on the asteroid's movements.

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I've been told about a lot of killer asteroids that wound up being nothingburgers over the years, but this is the first time I've heard of the chinks actually being worried about one. Wonder if they know something we don't, or if it's just the first time they've been in a position to try and do something about it?
 
I don't believe China could actually accomplish something as complex as a D.A.R.T. mission, but all the world powers coming together as "the group who saved mankind from an asteroid" would probably do wonders for global relations.

Nah every country would fight for the right to claim THEY blew up the asteroid and we’d end up destroying ourselves anyway
 
Now that DART demonstrated that you can change an asteroid's trajectory more than we previously anticipated with an impactor, it's high time for everyone with launch capabilities to swarm the Big Bad Newsworthy asteroid, regardless of the actual danger it poses. Someday, there WILL actually be a dangerous one out there, and we're gonna wanna know how we're gonna deal with it when that day comes, ahead of time...
 
Considering the last few attempts by the Chinese to launch rockets resulted in ways not dissimilar to somebody playing Kerbal Space Program for the very first time, I predict their Planetary Defense Unit would look something like this:



Hopefully, Jupiter will come in clutch and swing it away from Earth again otherwise we'd have to rely on a Muskrat to save us.
 
This is the "risk corridor" for this asteroid. Note how it does not affect the United States or Europe.

2024 yr4 risk corridor.png

The potential damage of this asteroid is estimated to be around 7.6 megatons, which is like a single, small hydrogen bomb. For reference, the first hydrogen bomb in 1952 had a yield of 10.4 megatons. As such, this does not have the potential to destroy the planet or threaten human civilization.
 
Considering the last few attempts by the Chinese to launch rockets resulted in ways not dissimilar to somebody playing Kerbal Space Program for the very first time, I predict their Planetary Defense Unit would look something like this:

View attachment 6975903

Hopefully, Jupiter will come in clutch and swing it away from Earth again otherwise we'd have to rely on a Muskrat to save us.
I was going to post this episode.


If the asteroid hits India, it will burn up in the pollution and stink of shit before it even hits the ground, landing on the floor no bigger than a chihuahuas head
 
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