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Well there is obviously some kind of misunderstanding here. You don't have to know precise trajectories to know that they do not pose a danger to the earth and the article specifically included the boulders not posing a danger to the Earth.
originally posted by: datguy
a reply to: Arbitrageur
the quoted comment is also not in regards to Dimorphos or Didymos but rather the "debris" that is the topic of the article.
From the same article, second to last paragraph,
“If we follow the boulders in future Hubble observations, we may have enough data to pin down the boulders’ precise trajectories,” Jewitt said.“And then we’ll see in which directions they were launched from the surface and figure out exactly how they were ejected.”
Also bolded for emphasis
See it doesn't say "neither Dimorphos or Didymos", it says "neither Dimorphos nor the boulder swarm have ever posed any danger to Earth." We don't need precise trajectories to know that, when approximate trajectories can suffice to draw that conclusion.
Fortunately, neither Dimorphos nor the boulder swarm have ever posed any danger to Earth.
originally posted by: Arbitrageur
You really should have paid a lot more attention to the word "precise" because that's the biggest clue to what is missing in your understanding.
Saying we don't know a "precise trajectory" is a vastly different statement than we have no idea of the trajectory as your OP seems to suggest, I hope you understand that or can figure it out!
It does seem like a silly assumption since as I already mentioned, the article said neither the asteroid nor the released boulders pose a threat to Earth, so how could they make that statement if they had no idea of the trajectories as your silly assumption claimed?
originally posted by: datguy
You see when a scientist states "If we follow the boulders in future Hubble observations, then we may have enough data to pin down the boulders' precise trajectories." I assume they don't know the trajectories
Not sure how i could make such a silly assumption...I think its the "IF" and "MAY" terms that were used, to be precise.
None of the boulders is on a course to hit Earth, but if rubble from a future asteroid deflection were to reach our planet, Jewitt said, they’d hit at the same speed the asteroid was traveling — fast enough to cause tremendous damage.
So that statement tells us that they have measured the velocity of the boulders relative to the Didymos/Dimorphos to calculate the mean sky-plane velocity dispersion. It's totally incorrect to say they "have no idea" of the trajectories, just because they don't know them precisely.
Measurements of 37 boulders show a mean sky-plane velocity dispersion of 0.30+/-0.03 m/s, only slightly larger than the 0.24 m/s gravitational escape velocity from the Didymos/Dimorphos binary system.
You seem to be thinking in a binary fashion, that an orbit is known, or unknown. That's not how it works in reality.
originally posted by: datguy
a reply to: Arbitrageur
how can they make the claim that there is no threat if they clearly do not know the trajectories?
Catalina Sky Survey
Of the three search programs currently in operation, the CSS discovers NEOs at the highest rate...same-night follow-up on a newly discovered object can usually be accomplished, facilitating the rapid determination of its orbit and thus an evaluation of the hazard posed by the object.
So the precision of the orbital calculations of those objects is increasing as additional observations are made.
Minor Planet Center
The MPC first identifies new observations with known objects or determines that the object is new. All orbits of identified objects are updated and improved daily...
Recent upgrades to computer equipment allow the MPC to calculate tens of thousands of orbit improvements per day.
Asteroids are all different sizes. I gave you examples of how asteroid orbits are initially estimated and continually refined. The "debris" of the boulders is technically just smaller asteroids. Because the boulders are some of the smallest we've observed, the observations are more difficlt, but the concept is similar, initial measurements give an indication of the trajectory which additional measurements make more precise. The process of making additional measurements of either the large asteroids or the small boulders allows more precision in orbital calculations
originally posted by: datguy
a reply to: Arbitrageur
You keep switching between the asteroids and the debris that was flung from them on the impact.
In regards to know trajectory, I'm talking about the debris.
But as Swift and his charges at the Thacher Observatory found when looking at Dimorphos' orbit more than a month after the initial collision, the asteroid's orbit seems to have continued to slow down — an unexplained turn of events, considering that most astronomers expected it to return to its original orbit speed pretty quickly.
"The number we got was slightly larger, a change of 34 minutes," Swift told New Scientist. "That was inconsistent at an uncomfortable level."
One explanation for the asteroid's orbit continuing to change so long after the Dart collision is that material thrown up by the impact, including rocks several metres across, eventually fell back onto the surface of the asteroid, changing its orbit even more.