ASE : Association of Space Explorers
We here at the USRC are proud to announce an official alliance with the ASE (Associaction of Space Explorers).
ASTEROIDS - COMETS - METEORS - BEWARE!
The watchful eye into the night sky is expanding as the reality behind earth-bound spaceform debris makes literal light in the sky.
Maybe you recently saw the footage of the Canadian meteor event this past October 2008 where for a brief moment the entire area was lit like daylight. Well relativity is the hindsight we are using now to protect Earth from disasters.
Between 500 and 1,000 massive asteroids cross the Earth's path regularly and any one of them could cause a global catastrophe with space experts urging quick preventive measures.
Some 6,000 cosmic objects circulating around the planet are currently known to experts in the field, the ASE told a press conference at the UN headquarters in Vienna, where it presented its report "Asteroid Threats: A Call for Global Response."
And of these, up to 1,000 had a diameter of 93 miles or more, meaning they could cause major damage to the Earth's surface, prompting fires, tsunamis and ensuing disasters like famine, disease, radiation poisoning, increased violence and a state of survival that may induce an increased level of violence and social unrest.
This could be a path to an apocalyptic future - waters may rise and decimate coastline cities.
These are just a few of the reasons the ASE has been created and currently the organization includes some 320 members from 34 countries, all of whom have already been in space.
A research, information-sharing and defence network was thus urgently needed to coordinate a global response to the problem, under the leadership of the UN, it said.
Although it should be possible to predict a collision up to 15 years before it occurs, the technology needed to divert an incoming asteroid has yet to be developed and this will require international cooperation, they said.
The UN Committee on the Peaceful Uses of Outer Space is due to examine the report.
We at the USRC say it is time to create a vast array of outer limit satellites that use radar imaging to ping all objects in the known sub-verse surrounding our solar system.
This could also be used to monitor incoming actual spacecraft from other civilizations as well as monitor flying man-made space debris and potential space anomalies like random generational wormholes and omni-holes.
ASTEROIDS - COMETS - METEORS - BEWARE!
The watchful eye into the night sky is expanding as the reality behind earth-bound spaceform debris makes literal light in the sky.
Maybe you recently saw the footage of the Canadian meteor event this past October 2008 where for a brief moment the entire area was lit like daylight. Well relativity is the hindsight we are using now to protect Earth from disasters.
Between 500 and 1,000 massive asteroids cross the Earth's path regularly and any one of them could cause a global catastrophe with space experts urging quick preventive measures.
Some 6,000 cosmic objects circulating around the planet are currently known to experts in the field, the ASE told a press conference at the UN headquarters in Vienna, where it presented its report "Asteroid Threats: A Call for Global Response."
And of these, up to 1,000 had a diameter of 93 miles or more, meaning they could cause major damage to the Earth's surface, prompting fires, tsunamis and ensuing disasters like famine, disease, radiation poisoning, increased violence and a state of survival that may induce an increased level of violence and social unrest.
This could be a path to an apocalyptic future - waters may rise and decimate coastline cities.
These are just a few of the reasons the ASE has been created and currently the organization includes some 320 members from 34 countries, all of whom have already been in space.
A research, information-sharing and defence network was thus urgently needed to coordinate a global response to the problem, under the leadership of the UN, it said.
Although it should be possible to predict a collision up to 15 years before it occurs, the technology needed to divert an incoming asteroid has yet to be developed and this will require international cooperation, they said.
The UN Committee on the Peaceful Uses of Outer Space is due to examine the report.
We at the USRC say it is time to create a vast array of outer limit satellites that use radar imaging to ping all objects in the known sub-verse surrounding our solar system.
This could also be used to monitor incoming actual spacecraft from other civilizations as well as monitor flying man-made space debris and potential space anomalies like random generational wormholes and omni-holes.
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