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The B612 Foundation
The B612 project grew out of a one-day workshop on deflecting asteroids,
organized by Piet Hut and Ed Lu at NASA Johnson Space Center,
Houston, Texas, on October 20, 2001.

Piet Hut and Ed Lu
This meeting was rather informal,
primarily a round-table discussion between twenty experts in areas
related to asteroids and to new propulsion and power technologies
who wanted to actually do something about deflecting near Earth
asteroids (NEAs).
There was a consensus that
low-thrust methods would likely be the mode of choice for trying
to change the orbit of an asteroid on a collision course with the
Earth. The use of nuclear explosions was seen as too risky and
unpredictable to be deemed safe. A variety of methods was
discussed, one of the most promising of which was to land
a plasma engine, powered by a nuclear reactor, on an asteroid.
By using the engine as a tugboat to push the asteroid its orbit
could be changed enough to avoid an impact with the Earth.
The
discussion focused on a number of technical details, such as how
to efficiently push a spinning asteroid, the question of how to
anchor the engine in the low-gravity environment of the asteroid,
problems related to the possible presence of dust, and so on.
But the main outcome of the meeting was the fact that among the
twenty experts a plasma powered tugboat looked like the best bet
for an early demonstration mission. Other technologies would
have to be evaluated, but the nuclear electric/plasma propulsion
combination with a direct docking would be the most generally
useful concept for all asteroid types. The development of
this technology would provide the capability to accomplish many
other deep space missions as well.
With
no showstoppers present, the meeting ended with an upbeat feeling
that we are technologically ready to plan and execute such a
demonstration mission. A change of just 1 or 2 cm/sec in the
orbital velocity of an asteroid would be easy to measure from the
Earth using radar, and would be enough to avoid a collision with
the Earth if it were carried out a number of years in advance.
A
good trial project would be to select a representative NEA (one
not headed toward Earth) and change its orbit slightly as a
demonstration of the capability. With the consensus of the
group that an organization to carry out this program would be
needed, Clark Chapman, Piet Hut, Ed Lu, and Rusty Schweickart took
up the challenge. After some further detailed discussions,
they established the B612 Foundation on October 7, 2002.
Here
is a list of the participants of the October 2001 workshop:
| William
Bottke |
Southwest
Research Institute |
| Dennis
Byrnes |
NASA/Jet
Propulsion Laboratory |
| Franklin
Chang |
NASA/Johnson
Space Center |
| Clark
Chapman |
Southwest
Research Institute |
| Tony
Dobrovolskis |
NASA/Ames
Research Center |
| Dan
Durda |
Southwest
Research Institute |
| John
Grunsfeld |
NASA/Johnson
Space Center |
| Piet
Hut |
Institute
for Advanced Studies |
| Don
Korycansky |
University
of California Santa Cruz |
| Stanley
Love |
NASA/Johnson
Space Center |
| Ed
Lu |
NASA/Johnson
Space Center |
| Andrew
Petro |
NASA/Johnson
Space Center |
| Dan
Mazanek |
NASA/Ames
Research Center |
| Bill
Merline |
Southwest
Research Institute |
| David
Morrison |
NASA/Ames
Research Center |
| David
Poston |
Los
Alamos National Laboratory |
| Dan
Scheeres |
University
of Michigan |
| Rusty
Schweickart |
Independent |
| Jared
Squire |
NASA/Johnson
Space Center |
| Bobby
Williams |
NASA/Jet
Propulsion Laboratory |
To
Visit The B612 Foundation Click On The logo
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