
Asteroid Baptistina didn't wipe out dinosaurs
Observations from NASA's Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer (WISE)
mission indicate the family of asteroids some believed was responsible
for the demise of the dinosaurs is not likely the culprit, keeping open
the case on one of Earth's greatest mysteries.
While scientists are confident a large asteroid crashed into Earth
approximately 65 million years ago, leading to the extinction of
dinosaurs and some other life forms on our planet, they do not know
exactly where the asteroid came from or how it made its way to Earth. A
2007 study using visible-light data from ground-based telescopes first
suggested the remnant of a huge asteroid, known as Baptistina, as a
possible suspect.According to that theory, Baptistina crashed into
another asteroid in the main belt between Mars and Jupiter about 160
million years ago. The collision sent shattered pieces as big as
mountains flying. One of those pieces was believed to have impacted
Earth, causing the dinosaurs' extinction.

Since this scenario was first proposed, evidence developed that the
so-called Baptistina family of asteroids was not the responsible party.
With the new infrared observations from WISE, astronomers say Baptistina
may finally be ruled out.
"As a result of the WISE science team's investigation, the demise of
the dinosaurs remains in the cold case files," said Lindley Johnson,
programme executive for the Near Earth Object (NEO) Observation
Programme at NASA Headquarters in Washington. "The original calculations
with visible light estimated the size and reflectivity of the Baptistina
family members, leading to estimates of their age, but we now know those
estimates were off. With infrared light, WISE was able to get a more
accurate estimate, which throws the timing of the Baptistina theory into
question."
WISE surveyed the entire celestial sky twice in infrared light from
January 2010 to February 2011. The asteroid-hunting portion of the
mission, called NEOWISE, used the data to catalogue more than 157,000
asteroids in the main belt and discovered more than 33,000 new
ones.Visible light reflects off an asteroid. Without knowing how
reflective the surface of the asteroid is, it's hard to accurately
establish size. Infrared observations allow a more accurate size
estimate. They detect infrared light coming from the asteroid itself,
which is related to the body's temperature and size. Once the size is
known, the object's reflectivity can be re-calculated by combining
infrared with visible-light data.
The NEOWISE team measured the reflectivity and the size of about
120,000 asteroids in the main belt, including 1,056 members of the
Baptistina family. The scintists calculated the original parent
Baptistina asteroid actually broke up closer to 80 million years ago,
half as long as originally proposed.
This calculation was possible because the size and reflectivity of
the asteroid family members indicate how much time would have been
required to reach their current locations - larger asteroids would not
disperse in their orbits as fast as smaller ones.
The results revealed a chunk of the original Baptistina
asteroid,needed to hit Earth in less time than previously believed, in
just about 15 million years, to cause the extinction of the dinosaurs.
- Science Daily |