(Space.com) Potentially dangerous small space rocks are smashing into the Moon a lot more often than was expected, according to an ongoing NASA study.
"We've now seen 11 and possibly 12 lunar impacts since we started monitoring the Moon one year ago," said Bill Cooke, head of NASA's Meteoroid Environment Office. "That's about four times more hits than our computer models predicted." [...]
"The flashes we saw were caused by Leonid meteoroids 2 to 3 inches (5 to 8 cm) in diameter," Cooke said today in a NASA statement. They hit with energies equal to 150 to 300 pounds of TNT.
Although it may be impossible to shoot down and track such objects entering lunar territory, it may not be improbable to create a strong enough barriers (or force fields) that can sustain damages from such impacts.
If so, then colonizing the Moon would quickly become a reality, allowing us to build communities and use our lunar neighbor as a springboard for Mars.
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it may not be improbable to create a strong enough barriers (or force fields) that can sustain damages from such impacts.
ReplyDeleteDig in deep. Manned structures that must be on the surface should have defenses against impact damage - we might take a clue from US submarine design.
SDI research might provide clues for point defense of larger cities.
This isn't a deal killer (and I know you're not saying that) just something to take note of when we design habitats there.