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1 - Recent progress in interpreting the nature of the near-Earth object population

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  12 October 2009

William F. Bottke Jr.
Affiliation:
Southwest Research Institute
Alessandro Morbidelli
Affiliation:
Observatoire de la Côte d'Azur
Robert Jedicke
Affiliation:
University of Hawai'i
Michael J. S. Belton
Affiliation:
Belton Space Exploration Initiatives
Thomas H. Morgan
Affiliation:
National Aeronautics and Space Administration, Washington DC
Nalin H. Samarasinha
Affiliation:
National Optical Astronomy Observatory
Donald K. Yeomans
Affiliation:
Jet Propulsion Laboratory, California Institute of Technology
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Summary

Introduction

Over the last several decades, evidence has steadily mounted that asteroids and comets have impacted the Earth over solar system history. This population is commonly referred to as “near-Earth objects” (NEOs). By convention, NEOs have perihelion distances q ≤ 1.3 AU and aphelion distances Q ≥ 0.983 AU (e.g., Rabinowitz et al. 1994). Sub-categories of the NEO population include the Apollos (a ≥ 1.0 AU; q ≤ 1.0167 AU) and Atens (a < 1.0 AU; Q ≥ 0.983 AU), which are on Earth-crossing orbits, and the Amors (1.0167 AU < q ≤ 1.3 AU) which are on nearly-Earth-crossing orbits and can become Earth-crossers over relatively short timescales. Another group of related objects that are not yet been considered part of the “formal” NEO population are the IEOs, or those objects located inside Earth's orbit (Q < 0.983 AU). To avoid confusion with standard conventions, we treat the IEOs here as a population distinct from the NEOs. The combined NEO and IEO populations are comprised of bodies ranging in size from dust-sized fragments to objects tens of kilometers in diameter (Shoemaker 1983).

It is now generally accepted that impacts of large NEOs represent a hazard to human civilization. This issue was brought into focus by the pioneering work of Alvarez et al. (1980), who showed that the extinction of numerous species at the Cretaceous–Tertiary geologic boundary was almost certainly caused by the impact of a massive asteroid (at a site later identified with the Chicxulub crater in the Yucatan peninsula) (Hildebrand et al. 1991).

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2004

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