Title: | NASA a history of near earth objects research |
Authors: | Erik M. Conway, Author ; Donald K. Yeomans, Author ; Meg Rosenburg, Author |
Material Type: | eBook |
Publisher: | [S.l.] : National Aeronautics and Space Administration, 2022 |
Series: | NASA SP |
ISBN / ISSN / EAN : | 978-1-62683-069-1 |
Size: | 1 online resource (407 p.) / ill |
Bibliography note: | Includes bibliographical references and index |
Languages: | English |
Class number: | QB651 |
Subjects: | Asteroids--Collisions with Earth ; Collisions (Astrophysics) ; Comets--Collisions with Earth ; Hazard mitigation--International cooperation ; Near-earth asteroids ; Near-Earth objects |
Description: | In 2016, NASA took on a new responsibility: Planetary Defense Coordination. That event reflected a growing interest in, and concern about, the threat of celestial impacts. In ancient times, the solar systems small bodies asteroids and cometswere sometimes seen as ill omens, warnings from the gods. In modern times, theyve come to be seen as the solar systems rubble, leftovers from its formation, but still largely ignored until the late 20th century. Increasingly, theyve been seen by scientists as objects worthy of study; by the general public, and the US government, as potential threats to be mitigated; and by space advocates as future resources. This book tells the story of those re-interpretations and NASAs role in them Provided by publisher. |
Access: | https://www.nasa.gov/connect/ebooks/history-of-neo-research.html |
Permalink: | https://isulibrary.isunet.edu/index.php?lvl=notice_display&id=11662 |