NASA detects 115-foot asteroid missing Earth
A tiny meteoroid exploded over Massachusetts last month, and a newly spotted 115-foot-wide asteroid missed Earth by just 56,000 miles, highlighting our vulnerability to undetected space threats. Curre
A tiny meteoroid the size of an elephant exploded over Massachusetts last month, rattling windows with the force of 300 tons of TNT and reminding ever
Read Full Story at Scientific American โWhy This Matters
The recent near-misses and undetected meteoroid events expose a critical gap in our planetary defense infrastructureโone that could determine whether humanity survives an avoidable catastrophe. While Hollywood dramatizes asteroid impacts as distant sci-fi threats, these incidents prove that cosmic collisions are an immediate, if infrequent, risk that demands proactive mitigation.
Background Context
NASAโs Planetary Defense Coordination Office, established in 2016, tracks only about 40% of the estimated 25,000 near-Earth objects larger than 140 metersโfar below the threshold needed for comprehensive early warning. The U.S. governmentโs 2023 *National Near-Earth Object Preparedness Strategy and Action Plan* allocates just $150 million annually to detection and deflection efforts, a fraction of what experts argue is necessary to address the scale of the threat.
What Happens Next
Expect heightened urgency in 2025 as Congress revisits the *NASA Authorization Act*, with proposals to expand the NEO Surveyor missionโs budget and accelerate the development of kinetic impactors like the DART spacecraftโs successors. Private sector players, including SpaceX and asteroid mining ventures, may also pivot toward defense applications, though regulatory oversight remains a hurdle.
Bigger Picture
This vulnerability reflects a broader pattern of underinvestment in existential risk mitigation, despite mounting evidence that low-probability, high-impact events demand long-term planning. As space exploration commercializes, the line between economic opportunity and planetary defense will blur, forcing policymakers to confront whether survival should be treated as a public goodโor an afterthought.
