<p>Chinese researchers want to send more than 20 of China's largest rockets to practice turning away a sizable asteroid - a technique that may eventually be crucial if a killer rock is on a collision course with Earth.</p>.<p>The idea is more than science fiction. Sometime between late 2021 to early 2022, the United States will launch a robotic spacecraft to intercept two asteroids relatively close to Earth.</p>.<p>When it arrives a year later, the NASA spacecraft will crash-land on the smaller of the two rocky bodies to see how much the asteroid's trajectory changes. It will be humanity's first try at changing the course of a celestial body.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/opinion/panorama/chinese-millennials-are-chilling-and-beijing-isn-t-happy-about-it-1005694.html" target="_blank">Chinese millennials are ‘chilling’, and Beijing isn’t happy about it</a></strong></p>.<p>At China's National Space Science Center, researchers found in simulations that 23 Long March 5 rockets hitting simultaneously could deflect a large asteroid from its original path by a distance 1.4 times the Earth's radius.</p>.<p>Their calculations are based on an asteroid dubbed Bennu, orbiting the sun, which is as wide as the Empire State Building is tall. It belongs to a class of rocks with the potential to cause regional or continental damage. Asteroids spanning more than 1 km would have global consequences.</p>.<p>The science center cited a recently published study in Icarus, a journal on planetary science.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/chinas-astronauts-carry-out-second-spacewalk-in-its-history-1004844.html" target="_blank">China's astronauts carry out second spacewalk in its history</a></strong></p>.<p>Long March 5 rockets are key to China's near-term space ambitions - from delivering space station modules to launching probes to the Moon and Mars. China has successfully launched six Long March 5 rockets since 2016, with the last one causing some safety concerns as its remnants reentered the atmosphere in May.</p>.<p>"The proposal of keeping the upper stage of the launch rocket to a guiding spacecraft, making one large 'kinetic impactor' to deflect an asteroid, is a rather nice concept," said Professor Alan Fitzsimmons from the Astrophysics Research Centre at Queen's University Belfast.</p>.<p>"By increasing the mass hitting the asteroid, simple physics should ensure a much greater effect," Fitzsimmons told Reuters, although, he added, the actual operation of such a mission needs to be studied in greater detail.</p>.<p>Current estimates show there is roughly a 1% chance a 100-metre-wide asteroid would strike Earth in the next 100 years, said Professor Gareth Collins at Imperial College London.</p>.<p>"Something the size of Bennu colliding is about 10 times less likely," Collins said.</p>.<p>Altering an asteroid's path presents a lower risk than blasting the rock with nuclear explosives, which may create smaller fragments without changing their course, scientists say.</p>
<p>Chinese researchers want to send more than 20 of China's largest rockets to practice turning away a sizable asteroid - a technique that may eventually be crucial if a killer rock is on a collision course with Earth.</p>.<p>The idea is more than science fiction. Sometime between late 2021 to early 2022, the United States will launch a robotic spacecraft to intercept two asteroids relatively close to Earth.</p>.<p>When it arrives a year later, the NASA spacecraft will crash-land on the smaller of the two rocky bodies to see how much the asteroid's trajectory changes. It will be humanity's first try at changing the course of a celestial body.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/opinion/panorama/chinese-millennials-are-chilling-and-beijing-isn-t-happy-about-it-1005694.html" target="_blank">Chinese millennials are ‘chilling’, and Beijing isn’t happy about it</a></strong></p>.<p>At China's National Space Science Center, researchers found in simulations that 23 Long March 5 rockets hitting simultaneously could deflect a large asteroid from its original path by a distance 1.4 times the Earth's radius.</p>.<p>Their calculations are based on an asteroid dubbed Bennu, orbiting the sun, which is as wide as the Empire State Building is tall. It belongs to a class of rocks with the potential to cause regional or continental damage. Asteroids spanning more than 1 km would have global consequences.</p>.<p>The science center cited a recently published study in Icarus, a journal on planetary science.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/chinas-astronauts-carry-out-second-spacewalk-in-its-history-1004844.html" target="_blank">China's astronauts carry out second spacewalk in its history</a></strong></p>.<p>Long March 5 rockets are key to China's near-term space ambitions - from delivering space station modules to launching probes to the Moon and Mars. China has successfully launched six Long March 5 rockets since 2016, with the last one causing some safety concerns as its remnants reentered the atmosphere in May.</p>.<p>"The proposal of keeping the upper stage of the launch rocket to a guiding spacecraft, making one large 'kinetic impactor' to deflect an asteroid, is a rather nice concept," said Professor Alan Fitzsimmons from the Astrophysics Research Centre at Queen's University Belfast.</p>.<p>"By increasing the mass hitting the asteroid, simple physics should ensure a much greater effect," Fitzsimmons told Reuters, although, he added, the actual operation of such a mission needs to be studied in greater detail.</p>.<p>Current estimates show there is roughly a 1% chance a 100-metre-wide asteroid would strike Earth in the next 100 years, said Professor Gareth Collins at Imperial College London.</p>.<p>"Something the size of Bennu colliding is about 10 times less likely," Collins said.</p>.<p>Altering an asteroid's path presents a lower risk than blasting the rock with nuclear explosives, which may create smaller fragments without changing their course, scientists say.</p>