National Geographic: Asteroids - Deadly Impact (1997)

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National Geographic: Asteroids - Deadly Impact (1997)

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"Asteroid: Deadly Impact"

When he first came to the high desert,

Gene Shoemaker wondered

if he was too late.

Was the West all explored,

the battles fought,

mysteries solved?

But geologists are taught that truth

lies in the rocks and dirt underfoot.

Step by step he pressed the Earth

for its secrets.

What Gene Shoemaker found

has made the ground itself less firm

Planet Earth not nearly as safe as

we always assumed.

It's like being in a hail of b*ll*ts

going by all the time.

They are b*ll*ts.

They're b*ll*ts out there in space.

These things have hit

the Earth in the past;

they will hit the Earth in the future.

It will produce a

catastrophe that exceeds

all other known natural disasters

by a large measure.

Before Gene Shoemaker,

few people gave it much thought

One of the most powerful forces

in the making of our planet,

and perhaps the

deadliest hazard we face

This is the story of impact!

March 23, 1993:

Great telescopes around the world

aimed their sights deep into the night

They were peering far into space

searching for traces

of the Big Bang at

the outermost reaches of the universe.

But at one tiny telescope on a

lonesome peak in California,

three old friends were rummaging in a

part of space much closer to home.

Five, four, three, two, one, I'm on...

Gene Shoemaker, geologist,

was looking for rocks

not on the ground but in the sky.

That night he and his team

found something astounding

a portent of another kind of Big Bang.

Comet Shoemaker Levy 9 first appeared

as a faint smudge in space.

It grew into a blazing streak of light

By the time it smashed into Jupiter

every major telescope

in the world was watching.

The impact unleashed fiery plumes

large enough to incinerate the Earth.

And it raised a terrifying question

could it happen here?

And what if it did?

When we get to something in the

ballpark of a mile in diameter

hitting the Earth, it'll produce a

catastrophe that exceeds all other

known natural disasters,

by a large measure.

In fact, the energy delivered

would be like taking all of

the world's nuclear weapons,

putting them all in one pile

and setting them all off at once

actually, it'd be a little bit

more energy than that.

Once, scientists had said

it could never happen.

Now many were shocked;

some talked about the end of the world.

If something sneaks up on us then

there's very little we can do.

In fact, today, the most likely

situation is zero warning.

The next impact of a mile-sized object

will probably happen without

any prior discovery of it at all.

The first thing you will know is

when you feel the ground shake

and see the plume of fire

coming up over the horizon.

He'd been taught cosmic collisions

are inconceivable.

But Gene Shoemaker likes to make up

his mind for himself.

It was a path that I personally

traveled in small steps.

I had to teach myself that the,

the fact,

if, if one really pursues

the observations,

the world is telling us that big

things do fall out of the sky.

What the world told Gene it said most

eloquently at Meteor Crater.

The gaping hole in the Arizona desert,

nearly a mile wide,

spoke of sudden disaster

catastrophe falling from the sky

with deadly impact.

There were similar craters

in other places.

But most geologists said they were the

remnants of ancient volcanoes,

formed over eons of time by constant,

predictable forces.

Nothing this big happened

quickly or suddenly.

Fiery rocks falling from the sky have

long been believed to predict disaster

not cause it.

Meteorites have been feared as omens

and cherished as

relics around the world.

For thousands of years they were our

only way of touching the sky

mysterious messengers from space.

The intrigue they held for

ancient oracles

still captivates modern scientists.

It was inside a meteorite - a Martian

rock that landed in Antarctica

that researchers discovered the most

compelling intimation ever

of life beyond the Earth.

Meteorites are chunks broken

off larger celestial bodies.

When they crash through Earth's

atmosphere, most lose speed and power.

So even big ones,

measuring up to 10 feet across,

usually don't cause

damage on a large scale.

Still, if you or your house happen to

stand in the path of a stone from space

repairs will be necessary.

Tons of meteorites rain

on the Earth every day

most smaller than a pea

but that's enough to light up the night.

This fireball was seen

by thousands of people along

the eastern seaboard in 1992.

Many were attending high school

football games,

and some had brought

their video cameras.

A piece of the meteorite touched down

in Peekskill, New York

and cratered Michelle Knapp's

I was sitting in my house watching TV

and the next thing you know,

I heard this loud noise,

sounded like a car accident.

It was a chunk of stone

speckled with iron,

about the size of a football.

They told me the rock was estimated at

about as old as the Earth itself

and that's exciting.

The Peekskill meteorite did make

the local news,

but like most meteorites,

its impact was minimal.

In 1972, a rock the size of a bus

blazed so brightly it was seen

in daylight and was filmed by a

tourist near the Grand Tetons.

There was no impact, confirming

what most scientists thought

that Earth's atmosphere would

incinerate even giant boulders,

or break them into

relatively harmless pieces.

What was it, then, that violently shook

the Earth on June 30th, 1908?

A blinding fireball exploded over a

remote part of Siberia.

As far away as England an eerie

glow lit up the sky.

Two decades passed before scientists

could mount an expedition

to find the site

where the blast occurred.

It was an arduous trip

to an uncertain destination;

but the scientists knew they had

arrived when they saw

the staggering devastation on the

banks of the Tunguska River.

Over hundreds of square miles

the forest lay flattened

in vast concentric circles.

The scientists suspected the

destruction had been caused

by a huge meteorite, an asteroid.

They set out to unearth it.

Long months spent draining the swamps

and digging into the

wasted land yielded nothing.

For years to come,

Tunguska would remain one of the

great mysteries of the Earth.

At about the same time,

on the other side of the globe,

a similar mystery haunted this

giant bowl in the Arizona desert.

In the early 1900s Daniel Barringer,

a mining engineer,

found little chunks of

meteorite around the crater.

He drilled the crater floor in

search of an asteroid

but came up empty handed

and deeply disappointed.

Geologists weren't surprised,

but years later,

a young Gene Shoemaker was intrigued:

what had happened here?

It did seem like a

giant wound in the Earth.

It appeared as though the ground

had been dealt a devastating blow.

Massive beds of rock

that once lay flat were broken

and thrust violently into the air.

The rim was strewn with giant

limestone boulders

that could only have come

from deep beneath the surface,

flying hundreds of feet in the air.

But like all geologists,

Gene had been taught that even

the most dramatic landscapes took

shape at a creeping pace

Meteor Crater could not

in fact be a meteor crater.

People say, Ah, yes, meteorites

fall out of the sky.

We accept that.

A chunk that big - I accept that

that falls out of the sky.

But it was a, it was a,

an intellectual leap to go from a

fist-sized stone to a mountain,

and, and have a mountain

come down out of the sky.

As an undergraduate student,

I didn't learn anything about impact.

It wasn't part of geology at that time

Geologists are the kind of

folk that like to say,

I'd like to see what the process is.

I'd like to see it happen then I'd

believe that it's happened in the past.

Gene Shoemaker was one geologist

who saw something happen that would

lead him to question the fundamental

principles of his profession.

He was in his twenties

when he took on a job

at the top secret Nevada test site.

Here he witnessed a new mechanism

by which craters could be made...

It all takes place in utter silence,

until finally, the shockwave...

BAM... and then it's followed with,

with roiling thunder.

It's throbbing, I mean, you can feel

the sound in your whole body,

uh, and, and it's, that's a very

dramatic thing to watch, too.

Never before had so much energy

been harnessed or released.

Could nature do the same?

This crater had not taken

shape over thousands of years.

It was created in an instant.

And it reminded Gene

of another place he'd seen.

It was the largest crater, at the time

formed by a shallow,

underground expl*si*n

and so, I could go directly from

this to Mother Nature's crater.

My hunch was that I would go have a

look at Meteor Crater

and see what the structure was

because it had never been

thoroughly mapped and described.

And so I didn't know what the

structure was until I went.

By having mapped this first,

I went to Meteor Crater and, voila.

I was astounded that all of those

parts of the crater that I could see

in the little nuclear crater were

reproduced here on a giant scale,

including, right down to the

pieces of melted material.

Around the crater Gene found

tiny beads of glass

rock that had been melted

and sprayed out;

he'd seen these too in Nevada.

Some rocks would reveal a newly

discovered mineral... coesite

An intensely squeezed form of quartz

that no volcano is

powerful enough to produce.

In this microscopic sample was encoded

a story of violent devastation

wrought by a 100-foot asteroid,

hurtling so fast the

atmosphere could not slow it down.

Gene Shoemaker had found

the fingerprint of impact.

It was the first conclusive proof

of an impact crater on Earth;

an affront to centuries of

scientific conviction,

and a challenge even to the

professor's devoted students.

Dr. Susan Kieffer once studied

with Gene in graduate school.

One day, Gene said I'm going to show

you what an impact is.

So, he grabbed a,

a fairly large r*fle and we...

This is my favorite r*fle

This is it?

I don't want to see this r*fle again,

after what happened that day.

Do you recognize this, Sue?

And then Gene told me to sh**t the,

the rock... which I did.

What happened is it just kicked...

The r*fle came back

and hit me in the nose,

and broke my glasses

and he looked at me and said,

Haven't you ever fired a g*n before?

And I said, No!

It's all right.

Here's Annie Oakley... with her nemesis

The ideas that Gene was

proposing not only made

individual people uncomfortable,

but, at a gut level,

whole schools of academic thinking.

That was the battle

that had to be fought against.

And he, I feel,

really did it almost single-handedly.

That's a nice lookin' crater.

Sue's lesson was simple

but revolutionary

a relatively small object traveling

at great speed will blast

a huge hole upon impact,

and, at the same time,

almost completely disintegrate.

The mysteries of Tunguska

and Meteor Crater were solved.

It came from over there,

from that direction.

You look up in the sky

and we see a brilliant fireball,

that's being made by the asteroid

or meteorite as it's coming in,

and it gets brighter

and brighter and brighter.

Gene's explanation of Meteor Crater

was controversial;

but the reason he studied craters

in the first place

seemed down right crazy.

When he was 20 years old, more than

a decade before the space program

Gene had a hunch America

would soon go to the moon.

And why would you go to the Moon?

To study the Moon.

And who do you send to study the Moon?

You send a geologist. Right?

I was going to do whatever I could do

to stand at the head of the line

when the time came to be the

geologist chosen to go to the Moon.

Can you imagine any greater adventure?

I couldn't.

I thought, well,

I better learn something about craters.

Oh, Gene, look, that's good.

Uh, I, uh, oh, look at that, I'm ready.

That looks so nice and slimming...

Gene dared confide his dream

only to one person

This was, uh, 1951.

When we first met, I just thought that

she was the neatest gal I had ever met.

That's it. His wife Caroline

would become his lifelong accomplice

in dreaming and scheming.

What attracted me to you...

What's that?

I think it's your

enthusiasm about things.

He gets this big smile and,

and you know he's just full of joy and

enthusiasm for what he's talking about.

Gene has a way of

getting what he wants.

We choose to go to the Moon.

We choose to go to the Moon...

In the early sixties,

it seemed Gene might actually

get what he wanted most.

We choose to go to the Moon

in this decade and do the other things

not because they are easy,

America was going to the moon,

and he was already

an expert on craters.

There were many thousands of them on

the near side of the moon alone.

Gene believed they could yield

tremendous knowledge about the role

of impact in shaping not only

the moon but the Earth, as well.

The Moon is this slate

that nobody's been erasing.

The record that we're

seeing of bombardment,

all of those craters that we see

on the Moon,

are a record of the, of the flux,

uh, of the hail of b*ll*ts coming

by that's hitting

both the Earth and the Moon.

If we want to see what a very fresh,

big impact crater looks like

when it's first formed,

you look at the Moon.

That guy up there.

The people who ran the space program

didn't look at the moon that way.

They were pitted in a furious race;

what mattered to them

was getting there,

not what could be

learned once we arrived.

There's no question that

NASA managers, NASA engineers and,

indeed the astronauts themselves,

were not particularly interested

in doing science in space.

Uh, that was not their mission,

they had signed up to, to,

uh, b*at the Russians to the Moon

and the farthest thing from

anybody's mind was actually doing

some science and

collecting some samples.

But, nevertheless,

eh, even though he was considered,

uh, probably a weirdo by,

by some in the engineering community,

Gene did not give up in trying to,

uh, push this idea,

uh, that doing geology

on the Moon was important.

But geology on the

moon was a hard sell.

Few scientists thought Gene

was right about the effect

of impact on the Earth,

much less the moon.

Many believed lunar craters

too were old volcanoes.

Before Gene got to ride a rocket,

he took a fateful trip

in a more modest vehicle.

The Shoemakers were on

vacation in Southern Germany.

Gene was eager to come here

to visit the Ries Basin

a 15-mile wide depression

that was universally believed

to be an ancient volcano.

Gene and Carolyn went

strolling through the

medieval town of Nordlingen

in the heart of the crater.

And there Gene came upon the largest

geologic sample he'd ever found:

St. George's Church, 500 years old,

was built of local stone.

Just looking at the rock made

me stop and say,

Whoa! Wait a minute. What's this?

I think I know what this is because

I've seen something like that before.

The walls were riddled with glass

formed from shocked and melted rock.

Gene didn't need a microscope to know

they contained coesite.

He was, was thrilled beyond words and,

and I was for him.

Just to go along and just admire all,

all of this evidence for impact and,

and the formation of a giant

crater and here it is in,

incorporated into the cathedral

and it was just,

just a very strange and

interesting feeling and,

and saying, Ah, yes, you know,

we know what this is now!

The Ries is nearly 20 times

as big as Meteor Crater.

It was the first big impact crater

on the Earth

which we could prove

was an impact crater

and that just changed

the whole ball game.

This was impact on an

entirely different scale

brought on by a mile-wide boulder

that drastically changed

the landscape 15 million years ago.

Suddenly, giant circular scars of impact

were recognized all over the globe

some were 200 miles wide.

Now we really understood there were

big craters made on the Earth and,

of course, that meant those big

craters we saw on the Moon

which I was also pretty sure

were of impact origin

now we had a way of saying, yes,

it's happened on the Earth,

the proof is here,

but they're also on the Moon.

Gene had finally earned the credibility

to convince NASA and

the United States Geological Survey

to establish a program aimed

at doing geology on the moon.

Gene was appointed to run it.

Dr. Shoemaker, as the man in charge of

the Astrogeology Program,

what are you telling the astronauts

to look for when they

start exploring the Moon?

Small features of the Moon that will

be close by around the landing site.

And, of course, we also want them to

bring back a large number of samples.

Gene brought the Apollo astronauts

to his favorite hole in the ground

to teach them geology.

This seemed to me like a natural place

to train astronauts

who were gonna go to the Moon

and look at craters.

In fact, the best place

in the world for it.

You really get a feel of

what a crater's like,

and everyone of them wanted

to get on the Moon,

so they wanted to have a good idea of

what they were gonna get into.

For added realism, Gene's team blasted

a replica of a lunar crater field

not far from his home.

There, he participated in the design

and testing of many of the vehicles

and tools used on the moon.

Gene's youthful dream

was becoming a reality.

His vindication as a scientist and his

greatest adventure would soon be won.

guidance internal

Engines on, 5, 4, 3, 2,

all engines running.

Launch commit.

Lift off, we have lift off

go for orbit.

Uh, no, I've, I, I'm not going

to make it to the Moon.

Just at the critical time

when I could have been standing at the

head of the line to go to the Moon,

my adrenal cortex quit, my adrenal

glands stopped functioning

and I knew that that would, uh, uh,

that would just knock me out

of the running - medically.

When you had that idea in your

head for 15 years,

it doesn't go away right away.

Gene remained with the lunar program

as one of its chief scientists.

His dream of doing geology on the moon

came true vicariously;

his friend and protg,

Dr. Jack Schmitt,

flew aboard Apollo 17.

As Gene watched,

his theories about the effects of

impact on the moon

were confirmed live on TV.

...job to get down and back up.

They just hit rocks,

so they'll come out easy...

Every rock you looked at.

You pick up a, a rock or look at a,

at a large boulder and there's a little pit,

uh, there that's caused

by a micrometeor impact.

It became clear that the dominant

geological process on the Moon was,

if I go down there,

that thing's about 15 feet deep...

I was immensely pleased

and proud of Jack,

but of course, I was wistful, too.

I couldn't help feeling that there,

but for that failed

adrenal gland, go I.

I'm getting in your back here.

Got it?

I used to have dreams that I,

that I got there.

You know, I got to the Moon.

I was there doing geology.

Even after, you know, for a long time.

I had to go do other things.

His feet would never leave the ground,

but Gene was intent on making

his own way into space.

He'd found the scars of impacts

that happened in the distant past.

Now, he'd be one of the very first to

find out if there were b*ll*ts

out there that might strike

the Earth in the future.

It was an obscure,

lonesome effort and involved frequent

nightlong drives to an

observatory far from home.

But, in time Gene found a

new collaborator

and companion for the road

a housewife who decided she, too,

would become an astronomer.

For Gene, it was a journey

from deep disappointment

to new dreams and adventures.

I had some real misgivings

because I thought this means

that I'm going to go to Palomar

and I'll have to stay awake

all night long and observe.

Because I'd never stayed

awake all night in my life.

It was kind of a surprise to me

to discover

that I really loved the observing.

I could, if I was very busy,

stay awake all night.

In the early morning hours

the Shoemakers would wend their

way up Palomar Mountain,

home to what was then the most

powerful telescope in the world.

The 200 inch Hale was the temple

of deep space astronomy

it was called the Big Eye,

and was not designed

for observing asteroids.

In fact, before Gene came along,

no one here or anywhere else

had ever systematically searched for

asteroids that could hit the Earth.

Down the slope from the Big Eye

was a tiny telescope

that was virtually unused.

The Little Eye was just

what Gene needed.

This is kind of suited to our,

our style,

a level that we,

we call it our Mom and Pop operation

and that's basically the

way we've done it.

It turned out to be a perfect

instrument for our purposes.

Compared with the giant up the slope,

the Little Eye did not look far

but it looked very wide.

It was ideal for patrolling the inner

solar system for stray b*ll*ts.

Most astronomers saw the solar system

as a harmonious arrangement

of planets orbiting the sun.

They paid little attention to the

hundreds of thousands of asteroids

chunks of iron and rock left over from

the formation of the major planets.

Most of them orbit harmlessly between

Mars and Jupiter the Asteroid Belt.

But if an asteroid veered out of

its normal orbit

into one that cuts across the path

of the Earth,

it would be anything but harmless.

Most scientists believed that

asteroids almost never

became Earth-crossers.

Were the Shoemakers searching

for something that wasn't even there?

The answer would not come easily.

Asteroids look so small on film

that Carolyn had to look for

them with a microscope.

Even then, they would be almost

invisible amid the stars.

But slowly, they emerged from the dark

tiny dim blurs.

Since they're so much closer to

Earth than the stars,

they seemed to streak through the sky.

In 1989, other astronomers captured

the first ever close-up of an

asteroid using a giant radar dish.

This huge rock was

more than a mile across.

Later radar images showed even more

ominous asteroids

mountains tumbling through space.

Toutatis... a giant boulder doing

regularly cuts across the

path of the Earth.

first of only two asteroids ever to be

actually photographed

is as large as the island

of Manhattan.

Like Gaspara,

it isn't an Earth-crosser.

But if it were, it could blast a hole

as wide as the state of Texas.

Gene didn't make it to the moon,

but together with Carolyn

he's discovered scores

of new celestial bodies.

Between them they've found hundreds of

asteroids and dozens of comets,

and helped transform

the map of the sky.

The solar system would never again

seem stable or predictable.

The harmony of the planets turned

into a threatening cacophony.

What we've been able to show,

using this good old telescope

right here,

and by seh, concentrating on,

uh, surveying a near

region around the Earth,

we've been able to show

that the Earth revolves around the sun

in its own swarm of asteroids.

These things will hit

the Earth in the future,

they have hit the Earth in the past.

These are the Earth-crossing asteroids.

In the 1980s,

new evidence emerged

of the terrible thr*at impact

poses to life on Earth.

Deep beneath Mexico's Yucatan

Peninsula is a 190-mile-wide crater,

made by a 100 million megaton impact.

It dates to the time,

when two thirds of all living species,

including the dinosaurs,

disappeared from the

face of the planet.

On March 22nd, 1989,

an asteroid came within six hours

of striking the Earth,

but was not detected until much later.

Other asteroids have come even closer.

One would have hit the Earth if it had

come just four hours sooner.

I don't think that people took the

notion of a, a, of the hazard of,

of impact seriously, uh, in the early

days of our, of our work here.

Uh, first of all, it took a while

for the news to get out.

The news that would change everything

began to break on the

night of March 23rd, 1993.

The Shoemakers and their collaborator,

David Levy, decided to take some

pictures of the sky

despite persistent clouds.

This was not a good night

for observing,

much less for making

historic discoveries.

Five, four, three, two, one, open.

Open. I'm on.

Okay, you're on it.

I could hardly see the star

I was supposed to be following,

because Jupiter was so close

that the glare of the big planet was,

was swamping the eye piece.

Okay.

plus 37, 59...

Okay.

I started to examine the film,

looking at all the things

that I knew would be there,

the ghost image of Jupiter, and the spikes

from, that we see on the films

when we've got a very bright

star or a bright planet.

And then I started to go

by something and I thought,

That's a galaxy?

No, that's not a galaxy.

And here was this most unusual

looking object.

And I thought, It looks like a comet.

It looked like a comet all right,

except it was a comet

that was stretched out.

Our films don't have enough resolution

to really see what the details

are because we're covering a big area

of the sky and so the comet's

actually quite tiny.

The team called their friend,

astronomer Jim Scotti,

who was manning a more

powerful telescope,

and asked him to check their finding.

He promised to call back as soon as

his telescope could be repositioned.

Well, by now, it's about two hours

that has gone by and then

I decided the time had come,

Jim had had enough time to take a

look and I called Jim Scotti

and he answered the phone in a voice

that I had never heard before

and I said, Jim, are you okay?

and he says,

Uhhh, yes. David,

the sound you heard is me trying

to pick my jaw off the floor.

And I said, Do we have a comet?

And he said,

Boy, do you have a comet.

And he started describing what he saw

and I was repeating everything

to the two of you and every sentence:

It had these five tails,

at least five discrete nuclei,

but, he said, I think there's more.

And, meantime, that music, we had,

we had just had

Beethoven's First Symphony,

it was playing in

in our room, just happened to be on,

and the Fourth Movement started

and it starts with this very

slow little introduction.

As, just as, as Jim said,

Boy, do you have a comet,

then the symphony went

into its full motion,

And then, right at that point,

Jim says, Boy do you have a comet.

The comet essentially an asteroid

with a long tail of dust and gas

had been torn into several pieces

by Jupiter's gravity.

Of course the big kicker, the, the big

news that it was going to hit Jupiter,

didn't arrive until

about six weeks later.

Here is this man looking at a

computer screen and it's saying,

Your comet, with your name on it,

is going to collide

with Jupiter in 14 months,

and Gene was sitting there

and he was looking at it, and his,

he was shaking his head and he said,

I don't believe it,

I'm going to see an

impact in my lifetime,

I just don't believe this.

Now the question is what would,

what was going to happen,

were we going to have a big show

or was it going to be something that

no one could see?

Even as Shoemaker Levy 9

approached Jupiter,

some eminent scientists remained

skeptical it would make

much of an impact.

Many astronomers believed the

giant planet would swallow

the comet into its vaporous depths.

On July 16th, 1994,

when the comet's leading fragment

was due to cross Jupiter's path,

scientists and reporters gathered

at the headquarters

of the Hubble Space Telescope.

Gene found an empty office

to call for news from

distant ground-based telescopes.

We have heard that there have been

some observations from Spain...

Dan? Gene Shoemaker here... fine.

in which a... I want to hear this...

uh, what we're, the question is,

uh, how soon will Brian be...

There would be no reliable data until

the Hubble Team downloaded the

day's first images of Jupiter.

See, there's nothing in the sky...

And they did,

in fact, detect the plume...

In the auditorium,

Gene had little more information

than the gathered reporters.

we should all take these reports

very carefully and cautiously at this time,

they need to be confirmed.

Look! Oh, my God!

Look at that!

The tiny spot on Jupiter was in fact

a fiery plume about half

the size of the Earth.

Whoa! Whoa! Look!

I'd like to introduce Dr. Heidi Hammel

We just downloaded the first

two orbits

which I have a raw laser printer

output, this is as raw as it gets.

Um, we can actually see

the impact site itself.

And I'll remind you,

this is for "A" the first one,

not the brightest one,

so we're gonna to

have a really exciting week.

I think we're

very, very privileged tonight

to see an event that's,

that's not once in a lifetime,

it's, it's once in a millennium.

Gene's vindication was a

long time coming

now it arrived with

a million megaton bang.

Few scientists have seen their ideas

demonstrated on this magnificent scale.

That was one great moment in our lives.

And it vindicated what Gene had been

trying to tell everybody

all these years and,

that it, eh, the, eh,

the SL 9 impacts spelled it out in

black and white that:

Gene, ya got it right.

Over the next week,

some 20 separate pieces of the comet

rained spectacular

devastation on Jupiter.

If anyone had any lingering doubts

that collisions take place

and that they can have

frightening consequences,

watching those events

on Jupiter convinced us.

To actually finally see an impact

on a planet was a, was crossing a threshold.

That event finally convinced most of

my geological colleagues that,

yes, there really are large impacts,

not just on Jupiter,

but on, on the Earth, as well.

Could you imagine what SL 9

would have looked like,

in its 21 pieces,

if they had been near the Earth?

Had any one of the fragments of SL 9

hit the Earth,

uh, one of the bigger fragments,

we, we probably would have had a dark

cloud covering the whole Earth

in the time of an order

of an hour and a half.

And we saw that the clouds

on Jupiter lasted for months,

as fairly dark clouds.

What about even before the cloud,

what about the rising temperatures

with the in-falling material?

What about before that?

If people knew that a fragment

was going to hit the Earth,

I wonder about the mass hysteria

that could have resulted.

Where would you go?

People would say, Where can we hide?

What can we do?

You would feel as though you

were in an oven turned on to broil.

An enormous hole has been gouged

in the Earth,

then finally the sky will

just turn black, absolutely,

completely black, everywhere,

all over the world.

Impacts today are a risk,

they're a hazard,

they're something we need to

protect ourselves against.

If we don't learn how to protect

ourselves against impacts

then on the long term, we are likely

to be wiped out by impacts.

If it happened to the dinosaurs,

it could happen to us.

In SL 9's wake, scientists

and weapons experts

from Russia and the United States

met at

Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory.

You've got fires.

You've got massive tidal waves.

So, we have a very complicated...

The topic was the end of the world.

Multiple mechanisms

to produce extinction.

You're gonna have

everything b*rned down around you...

Asteroids big enough to k*ll a

quarter of the world's

human population collide with the

Earth about twice in a million years.

Smaller bodies, capable of

wiping out a major city,

could hit once every

two to three centuries.

it's going to glow for about

a half an hour

and set everything on fire around you.

Then it's going to be pitch black.

One thing that makes the comet and

asteroid impact hazard so important,

relative to other hazards,

is that it is the one hazard that is

capable of k*lling billions of people,

of putting at risk

our entire civilization.

We could have any number of storms

or earthquakes or volcanoes

and they can do

terrible damage locally,

but they do not put the entire

planet at risk the way an impact does.

Incredibly, impact is the one great

natural disaster

which we may be able to prevent.

Many of those gathered

at Lawrence Livermore

were veterans of the Cold w*r,

and already knew something about

confronting as*ault from the sky.

These bombs obviously, of course,

characteristically of about a

hundred times their mass in a,

in chemical high expl*sive.

In this case, a nuclear expl*si*n,

you blow off some material,

you get a reaction...

If an approaching asteroid or comet

is detected in the near future,

the scenario might

involve the most powerful long

range rocket in the world

the Russian Energia.

Tipped with an

accurate American warhead,

the rocket would be detonated off

the surface of the asteroid,

nudging it out of its

Earth-approaching orbit.

But before you launch a m*ssile,

you need to know where to aim.

Only a fraction of large Earth-crossing

asteroids have been located.

This may prove to be the

greatest oversight in human history.

I can tell you with confidence

that for the 10% of the big ones

that have been discovered,

there is no danger,

but I can tell you nothing about the

So, yes, we understand the general

nature of the risk,

but we have not yet taken any real

concrete efforts

to protect ourselves or even to look

and see if there's

anything headed our way.

More telescopes have joined the search

Even the U.S. Air Force has

contributed technology and expertise.

Big science has taken up

the hunt for asteroids.

Still, the most experienced team

in the business is leading

the charge from a tiny new

telescope in their backyard.

Both Carolyn and I,

we're eyeball scientists.

We like to look at the sky.

It's kind of an old fashioned brand

of science - eyeball science

uh, eyeball observations

but there's still,

there's still a window there

for the eyeball scientist

who's got the right idea,

uh, to go and make

wonderful discoveries.

Gene and Carolyn Shoemaker should know

it's the story of their lives.

Now, they await with all of us the

next messenger from the stars.

The question is not if, but when...
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