http://www.chron.com/cs/CDA/story.hts/space/1602828

Asteroids regularly explode over Earth with the intensity of a nuclear bomb
and there is a chance the explosions could be mistaken for a nuclear attack,
possibly triggering an atomic war, an Air Force general said Thursday.
At least 30 times a year, a space rock measuring a few yards across slashes
into the atmosphere and explodes, releasing energy equal to that of an
atomic bomb, Air Force Brig. Gen. Simon P. Worden told members of a House
science subcommittee.

Worden, deputy director for operations of the U.S. Strategic Command, said
the United States has satellite instruments that determine within a minute
if the explosion is a nuclear weapon or a natural explosion from an
asteroid.

But no one else has such technology, he said, and without it, some countries
could infer the explosions came from a nuclear bomb and could launch an
atomic attack against an enemy.

For instance, Worden said, Pakistan and India, both of which have the atomic
bomb, were at full alert in August, poised for war.

Not far away, a few weeks before, Worden said, U.S. satellites detected over
the Mediterranean an atmospheric flash that indicated "an energy release
comparable to the Hiroshima burst." Air Force instruments quickly determined
it was caused by an asteroid 15 feet to 30 feet wide.

"Had you been situated on a vessel directly underneath, the intensely bright
flash would have been followed by a shock wave that would have rattled the
entire ship, and possibly caused minor damage," Worden told the panel.

The explosion received little or no notice, the general said, but it
possibly could have caused a major human conflict had it occurred over India
or Pakistan while those countries were on high alert.

"The resulting panic in the nuclear-armed and hair-triggered opposing forces
could have been the spark that ignited a nuclear horror we have avoided for
over a half-century," he said.

Worden said the Air Force's early warning satellites in 1996 detected an
asteroid burst over Greenland that released energy equal to about 100,000
tons of explosives. He said similar events are thought to have occurred in
1908 over Siberia, in the 1940s over Central Asia and over the Amazon basin
in the 1930s.

Worden said the current generation of early warning satellites do a good job
of detecting asteroid bursts in the atmosphere and that new equipment will
be even better. He said the Air Force is working on an asteroid alert
program that would quickly send information from the satellites to
interested nations.

He said the Air Force is studying the establishment of what he called a
Natural Impact Warning Clearinghouse that would be part of the North
American Aerospace Defense Command communications center in Cheyenne
Mountain near Colorado Springs, Colo.

NASA is in the midst of a 10-year program to find and assess every asteroid
of 1 kilometer (0.6 miles) or more in size that could pass close to Earth
and might pose a danger to the planet.

If an asteroid 1 kilometer in size struck the planet it could wipe out whole
countries. An asteroid 1 mile across could snuff out civilizations, while
one that is 3 miles across could cause human extinction, experts say.




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