NASA unveils earth defense strategy for Asteroid threat - VIDEO
The idea behind NASA’s DART (Double Asteroid Redirection Test) is to throw asteroids off their collision course with Earth using a projectile a few feet square. Yes, a device the size of a refrigerator could literally save the world from an asteroid-induced doomsday.
Johnson’s planetary defense team has been authorized to test DART "with a non-threatening small asteroid," called Didymos B, slated to approach earth in the early 2020s. NASA plans to shoot its spacecraft-projectile hybrid at Didymos B, which is only 160 meters in diameter but will be hurtling through space at a blurrying 3.7 miles per second.
"Since we don’t know that much about their internal structure or composition, we need to perform this experiment on a real asteroid," Johns Hopkins researcher Andy Cheng said in a release. Cheng hopes DART "can show how to protect Earth from an asteroid strike… by knocking the hazardous object into a different flight path that would not threaten the planet."
Asteroids are actually a daily occurrence for earthlings, NASA said in a Friday release, but they go essentially unnoticed since the atmosphere incinerates them before landing.