ANNUAL PROGRESS REPORT 2023
LETTER FROM THE PRESIDENT This last year, we onboarded new talent to help fulfill our goal of developing tools and technologies to understand, map, and navigate our solar system. Our growing staff and technological progress would not have been possible without the Tito’s Challenge Grant, several anonymous leadership donors, and a global community of supporters new and old that generously stepped up to fund our work. In addition, Google Cloud has been sponsoring our use of scalable computational and storage infrastructure for our Asteroid Discovery Analysis and Mapping (ADAM) platform. In this year’s report, you will read about ADAM’s progress and our continued work to educate, engage, and inspire the public about asteroids. At the heart of this work is a growing team of skilled professionals. New this year are Alec Koumjian, Head of Software Engineering; Colleen Fiaschetti, Director of Special Projects; Spencer Nelson, Principal Software Engineer; Dr. Joachim Moeyens, Research Software Engineer; and Delphine Veronese-Milin, Science & Operations Associate. We also had a wonderful group of new and returning interns. Read more on page 16. The William K. Bowes, Jr. Foundation’s leadership support, along with support from anonymous donors, played a crucial role in launching and funding the Asteroid Institute Fellows program at the University of Washington. In December of last year, Joachim Moeyens became the first PhD graduate of this program. Today, Dr. Moeyens works with our engineering team, contributing to the ongoing development and deployment of THOR on the ADAM platform. Read more on page 10. Each year we support conferences and collaborations to advance asteroid science and the use of the ADAM platform. To that end, we sponsored the LSST Solar System Science Collaboration (SSSC), which is working to understand optimum survey strategies for discovering moving objects throughout the solar system. We also supported LSST@Europe5 to fund young PhD students and early career scientists to attend the conference focused on LSST science opportunities. And finally, we sponsored the biennial Planetary Defense Conference (PDC), as we have done since its inception. Attending the PDC in Vienna was a professional highlight for our team. On June 30th, we returned to the California Academy of Sciences, where we hosted our first Asteroid Day in 2015, to launch our new program: the Schweickart Prize. Named in honor of B612’s co-founder Russell (Rusty) Schweickart, the prize aims to recognize
2
LETTER FROM THE PRESIDENT
students and researchers furthering the field of planetary defense. The inaugural prize was awarded to Rusty in recognition of his significant contributions to space exploration, planetary defense, and public leadership over his 60-year career, which included being an Apollo 9 astronaut, operating as Director of Skylab-2, serving as
The Asteroid Institute team at the spring hackathon at the GooglePlex in Palo Alto. From left to right: Colleen Fiaschetti, Venus Mack, Dr. Massimo Mascaro, Kathleen Kiker, Spencer Nelson, Dr. Ed Lu, Dr. Mario Juric, Danica Remy, Nate Tellis, Alec Koumjian, Dr. Joachim Moeyens.
NASA Director of User Affairs, and as California Energy Commission Chair, and also cofounding the Association of Space Explorers and Asteroid Day. Read more on page 22. We also used the occasion to celebrate our 20th Anniversary, commemorating B612’s history, pivots, and advancements over the past two decades. We were joined by board members, including Chair Peter Schwartz, Lawrence Wilkinson, Geoff Baehr, and, most importantly, our dedicated community of supporters. Each year, we are inspired by the energy, enthusiasm, and continued evolution of the independently organized Asteroid Day events worldwide. Astronomy clubs, universities, research centers, governments, and others took the opportunity to educate and inspire people about asteroids in their own language. These events help shift the global movement to a local and meaningful conversation. Read more on page 18. The achievements of the past year stand as a testament to the collaborative spirit of our dedicated team, made possible through the unwavering support of our generous donors and advisors. We extend our heartfelt gratitude to all who have been a part of our crew, making our mission to explore and safeguard our solar system a reality. Looking ahead,
Danica Remy President, B612 Foundation Co-Founder, Asteroid Day
LETTER FROM THE PRESIDENT
3
ABOUT US
ASTEROID INSTITUTE
Asteroid Institute, a program of B612, brings together scientists, researchers, and engineers to develop tools and technologies to understand, map, and navigate our solar system. Leveraging advancements in computer science, instrumentation, and astronomy, our mission is to support economic space exploration, enhance our understanding of the solar system’s evolution, and protect our planet from asteroid impacts.
ASTEROID
EDUCATION
Since 2002, B612 has supported public advocacy and educational programs, including the new Schweickart Prize, Asteroid Day, and global internships. Our work has been carried out entirely through the support of private donors from 46 countries.
What started in 2002 as a visionary idea to develop the technology to deflect an asteroid has grown into a world-renowned organization and scientific institute with a key role in the astronomy community. For years, B612, our partners, and a global community of dedicated scientists and researchers have advocated for increased asteroid detection. Many victories have resulted from those efforts, and asteroid detection and deflection are now debated seriously in scientific, governmental, and public conversations.
IN THE LAST YEAR ADAM::Precovery In August, we launched ADAM::Precovery, the first publicly available service run on our ADAM platform. Precovery allows users to confirm and refine the orbits of asteroids by rapidly searching through a collection of astronomical datasets that have been curated and hosted on Google Cloud. The launch of Precovery marks the first public service provided by the Asteroid Institute.
ESA and JPL Risk List Part of the new ADAM::Precovery includes nightly searches of all 1400 asteroids listed on the European Space Agency’s
It felt like Googling the imaged sky!
and NASA JPL’s Risk Lists. If any new objects have been
DR. ZELJKO IVEZIC, DIRECTOR OF THE RUBIN
added to either list, or any objects have had their orbits
OBSERVATORY ON OUR ADAM::PRECOVERY
updated, a new precovery search is triggered. Any findings by the Institute are then reported to the Minor Planet Center, the official body for observing and reporting on small-bodied objects, to update orbits of known asteroids.
Schweickart Prize The launch of our new program, the Schweickart Prize, named after our co-founder Apollo 9 astronaut Rusty Schweickart, will inspire a new generation of planetary scientists. The prize will be awarded on a yearly basis to young students supporting efforts in the field of asteroid science, research, education, and policy work.
Planetary Defense Conference B612 returned for its 8th year as a founding sponsor of the biennial Planetary Defense Conference. Hosted in Vienna, Austria, the Asteroid Institute team shared the work on the ESA/JPL Risk List monitoring capabilities.
Hackathons We hosted our first hackathon of the year with our strategic partners at the GooglePlex in Palo Alto, CA. The second hackathon coincided with the triennial Asteroids, Comets, and Meteors Conference in Flagstaff, AZ where our team had the chance to engage with current and future users of the ADAM platform.
The coast of Brittany, France. Photo by Ed Lu from the ISS IN THE LAST YEAR
5
ASTEROID INSTITUTE LETTER FROM THE EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR Mapping our solar system is a collaborative undertaking involving numerous scientists, researchers, observatories, and global supporters. The Asteroid Institute team plays a growing and integral role in this global initiative. We do this work because we know that the tools we are developing will bring significant benefits for humanity. This past year, the Asteroid Institute laid the foundation for the launch of our ADAM::Precovery service, which allows asteroid hunters to locate known objects in historical datasets, significantly enhancing orbit accuracy and our impact-probability calculations. Learn more about the service on page 8. This year, we also implemented our unified dataset, which allows us to make use of multiple astronomical datasets, including many that were never intended for asteroid discovery. By ingesting as many astronomical surveys into this unified dataset as we can, we are creating an incredibly powerful tool for asteroid discovery. The Asteroid Discovery Analysis and Mapping (ADAM) platform now holds approximately 5.3 billion point sources. This unique dataset is precisely what we and our fellow astronomers believe could assist in discovering millions of unseen moving objects. This system, run on Google Cloud, will enable our cutting-edge tools like Precovery and THOR to run at scale and be accessed by anyone worldwide. Read more on page 10. The Asteroid Institute also actively participates in conferences to engage with the astronomy community, solicit valuable feedback, and nurture the growth of young researchers. This year, our engineers and scientists attended the Planetary Defense Conference, as well as the Asteroids, Comets, and Meteors conference. Our presentations on Precovery and forthcoming THOR services generated significant interest and enthusiasm within the astronomical community. These partnerships are integral to our mission of developing a robust, reliable, and scalable mapping platform. Additionally, through our historical advocacy efforts and the global attention of the DART mission, the opportunity to test new methods of asteroid deflection has never been more attainable. We hope to see a technology-demonstration mission of the gravity tractor tested soon. Read more on page 12. I look forward to reporting on more asteroid discoveries in the near future!
Dr. Ed Lu Executive Director, Asteroid Institute 6
LETTER FROM THE EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR Photos on pages 2 and 6 by Christopher Michel
ASTEROID DISCOVERY PROGRESS More than 99% of the asteroids large enough to destroy a city (like the Tunguska asteroid) remain untracked.
NEAR-EARTH ASTEROID SIZE RANGES
19–44 m
Over 1 km
140 m–1 km
44–140 m
Chelyabinsk, 2013 19 m (62 ft)
Tunguska, 1908 45 m (148 ft)
140 m (459 ft)
More than 30 A-bombs
More than 400 A-bombs
More than 7,000 A-bombs
CITY KILLER
NASA GOAL
More than 150,000 A-bombs CIVILIZATION ENDER
There are
There are
25,000
There are
There are
2.5 million
near-Earth asteroids in this size range.
near-Earth asteroids in this size range.
500,000
near-Earth asteroids in this size range.
1% tracked
1,000
near-Earth asteroids in this size range.
30% tracked
93% tracked
LSST & NEOSM 2008–2030 (EST. COMPLETION)
SPACEGUARD SURVEY 1998–2010 (COMPLETED)
0.1% tracked
NEAR-EARTH ASTEROIDS TRACKED As of October 1, 2023, the Minor Planet Center has 32,960 near-Earth asteroids in its database. This year, 1,914 new NEAs were discovered, largely by Pan-STARRS and Catalina Sky Surveys.
ASTEROID INSTITUTE ADAM::PRECOVERY By Kathleen Kiker In August, Asteroid Institute announced the launch of a new publicly available online precovery service, a tool for refining asteroid orbits. The service, which runs on our Asteroid Discovery Analysis and Mapping (ADAM) platform, is a key component to reliable asteroid discovery. Orbit refinement enhances the accuracy of orbital predictions by incorporating new observations. This is vital for pinpointing an object’s location, predicting orbit evolution, and assessing its potential impact on Earth. Often, additional observations are obtained through expensive follow-up campaigns or specialized searches within astronomical surveys. For those lacking such resources and for objects beyond telescopic reach, ADAM::Precovery (pronounced Precovery on ADAM) bridges the gap. “Precovery” enables us to discover objects in observations that were previously overlooked. As asteroids are typically detected using multiple nightly observations, many images remain unlinked to specific objects. Precovery rectifies this by identifying these overlooked images, even in datasets not initially intended for asteroid detection. Although precovery is not a new concept, it was historically a manual process involving laborious tasks like hand-scanning photographic plates. ADAM::Precovery streamlines this process, making it universally accessible. The service preprocesses point-source catalogs into a unified data format, allowing the precovery algorithm to swiftly retrieve relevant observational data for comparison with the orbit. Operating on Google Cloud’s Kubernetes, it can efficiently handle thousands of orbits in hours. Orbit refinement is crucial for Near-Earth Objects (NEOs) that might impact Earth, as even minor variations in time or position can significantly alter outcomes. ADAM::Precovery contributes to identifying observations of dangerous asteroids listed by JPL’s and ESA’s Risk List, enhancing our ability to assess risks. The service scans these lists nightly, utilizing ADAM::Precovery to identify new observations for human vetting. Precovery is also key to the Trackletless Heliocentric Orbit Recovery (THOR) algorithm for asteroid discovery. Unlike traditional tracklet-based methods, THOR detects asteroids using archival data, often providing orbits with limited observations. Precovery refines these uncertain orbits, aiding in rejecting false linkages. ADAM::Precovery’s speed and scalability are crucial for processing the extensive dataset. ADAM::Precovery’s effectiveness was showcased in July by rapidly locating additional observations of Potentially Hazardous Asteroid 2022 SF289, demonstrating its utility in real-time situations. Dr. Zeljko Ivezic praised its rapidity, likening it to “Googling the imaged sky.”
8
ADAM::PRECOVERY
Beyond risk assessment, orbit refinement plays a pivotal role in asteroid missions, aiding target selection and mission planning. The space mining company Karman+ used precovery to identify potential mission targets. The demo for ADAM::Precovery is accessible on the new B612.ai website. Users can input orbits or search for specific asteroids, and the service will retrieve matching observations from the NOIRLab Source Catalog and Zwicky Transient Facility.
About Kathleen Kathleen (Kat) Kiker is part of the ADAM software engineering team, focusing on orbital determination. Her prior research focused on black-hole formation, binary stars, and a number of large-scale physics simulations. She is skilled in a range of programming, modeling, and graphing tools to solve physics problems. Kat earned a bachelor’s degree with honors in physics from the New College of Florida, and a master’s degree in physics from George Mason University.
ADAM::PRECOVERY
9
ASTEROID INSTITUTE THE KEY TO MAPPING OUR SOLAR SYSTEM By Alec Koumjian Throughout history, the aggregation of data and images has consistently paved the way for the development of remarkable technologies, benefiting people from diverse backgrounds and serving various purposes worldwide. In the early 2000s, a company called Keyhole Inc. undertook the task of organizing a huge volume of satellite, terrain, and mapping data and creating a software platform to leverage it. That platform would later become a key component of Google Maps. Asteroid Institute has embarked on a similar path using astronomical data, aiming to develop a tool that has the potential to significantly enhance our understanding and interaction with space. Today, the ability to map the solar system is limited in several directions. The first is insufficient observational data. Even when tallied together, historical surveys have captured only a fraction of the objects out there. The good news is that LSST and other upcoming surveys will increase the available data by orders of magnitude. Even with sufficient observations, there remains the enormous task of attributing billions of points of light to known or as-yet-undiscovered objects, including Potentially Hazardous Asteroids. Once discovered and verified, the task continues as those objects must be tracked continuously with updated observations due to the dynamic nature of orbital mechanics. Starting in the fall of 2022, Asteroid Institute began to formalize a plan to collect and normalize point-source data from many different surveys. Currently that dataset comprises roughly 5.3 billion point-source observations from 14 telescopes and growing. This is curated to maximize the discovery and accurate mapping of the orbits of solar system bodies, with a special focus on Near-Earth Objects and Potentially Hazardous Asteroids. Building and continuously refining this dataset requires a variety of bespoke software pipelines that draw data from SQL-like TAP databases, CSV files, and other formats. This system is developed quickly by taking advantage of Google Cloud orchestration on Kubernetes and using virtually limitless storage mediums like Cloud Storage and BigQuery. The creation of this dataset has generated some interesting findings, including discrepancies in the reporting of millions of observations to the Minor Planet Center. Yet the real focus of this collection is under active development. Earlier this year, Asteroid Institute released a version of ADAM::Precovery that can scan the dataset’s billions
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THE KEY TO MAPPING OUR SOLAR SYSTEM
of observations to find additional sightings of known objects. Next, the Institute is preparing to run the cadence-independent linking algorithm, THOR, using this dataset as its source for discovery. What should follow is a virtuous cycle of discovery and attribution, as the enormous amount of computation is done to solve this bewildering version of connect the dots.
PUBLIC ASTRONOMICAL SURVEY DATA
Asteroid Discovery Analysis and Mapping (ADAM) Platform
NOIRLab
GOOGLE KUBERNETES ENGINE
Pan-STARRS
COMPUTATIONAL JOBS
Catalina Real-Time Transient Survey
DATA PIPELINE
API SERVICES
Zwicky Transient Facility Large Synoptic Survey Telescope FUTURE DATA SETS
Unified Astronomical Data
Job Results
ADAM-DATASET CLOUD STORAGE
About Alec Alec Koumjian is the Head of Software Engineering. With a dual degree in Computer Science and Physics from Marlboro College, he has over a decade of experience with writing software and leading teams across diverse industries including machine learning. His technical background includes building scalable APIs, job systems, vector based search engines, and code performance analysis in addition to frontend development.
THE KEY TO MAPPING OUR SOLAR SYSTEM
11
ASTEROID INSTITUTE GRAVITY TRACTOR In early 2000, co-founders Dr. Ed Lu, Rusty Schweickart, Dr. Piet Hut, and Dr. Clark Chapman gathered to discuss how to further the efforts in the emerging field of planetary defense. At the time, most space agencies were in the process of developing and evolving programs focused on spearheading efforts in detecting, monitoring, understanding, and mitigating Near-Earth Objects. Acknowledging the need for innovative approaches to asteroid deflection, B612 dedicated resources to develop research, advocate, and create proposals for planetary defense technologies. This endeavor ultimately led to the invention of the Gravitational Tractor in 2005. Developed by astronauts Dr. Stanley Love and Dr. Ed Lu, the Gravitational Tractor, also known as the “Gravity Tractor,” offered a solution for altering the trajectory of an asteroid in a highly controllable fashion. The concept involves strategically positioning a spacecraft near an asteroid decades before its predicted impact, utilizing the craft’s gravitational mass to gradually alter the asteroid’s orbit over time. Introduced in a November 2005 publication in Nature, it received validation in 2008 through a report funded by B612 and conducted at JPL. Over a decade later, we were able to celebrate the first ever deflection demonstration. NASA’s Double Asteroid Redirection Test (DART) mission was launched in 2021 with a goal to test the kinetic impactor technique. The concept is simple: slam a spacecraft into an asteroid at high velocity to modify its trajectory. On September 26, 2022, DART successfully executed its primary mission by impacting Dimorphos, the moon of asteroid Didymos, resulting in a 33-minute alteration of its orbit around Didymos, and thereby proving the engineering behind the kinetic impactor. Through B612’s advocacy efforts and following the success of the DART mission, there is now heightened enthusiasm to protect the Earth from asteroids. According to the Pew survey conducted May 30–June 4, 2023, monitoring asteroids that could potentially hit the Earth ranks at the top of the public’s priority list for NASA. The Asteroid Institute, along with our partners at Google, University of Washington, Vera C. Rubin Observatory, and Institute for Data-intensive Research in Astrophysics and Cosmology (DiRAC) are working together to make finding and tracking Potentially Hazardous Asteroids a reality. The Asteroid Discovery Analysis and Mapping (ADAM) platform is now hosting the first publicly accessible service to precover unattributed objects through cutting-edge algorithms, a unified observational dataset, and the high-compute power of Google Cloud. While it’s encouraging that the kinetic impactor has been demonstrated, a key missing component of any future asteroid deflection campaign is a supplementary, controllable fine-tuning deflection method. With sustained funding, B612 will continue to advocate for a Gravity Tractor demonstration.
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GRAVITY TRACTOR
Gravitational tractor for towing asteroids by Dr. Stanley Love and Dr. Ed Lu published in Nature 438, 177-178 (2005)
GRAVITY TRACTOR
13
PROGRAM EVOLUTION 2002
2012–2013
2016
2018
B612 founded with goal to significantly alter the orbit of an asteroid in a controlled manner.
Open letter sent to NASA about deflection-mission planning and discussions regarding potential impact of asteroid 2011 AG5.
Asteroid Day is recognized by the United Nations and holds 500 events worldwide.
B612 launches Asteroid Institute fellows program.
2004–2008 B612 leads the Apophis debate.
2005 B612 announces invention of gravity tractor in Nature.
2008–2009 B612 funds design study at JPL showing feasibility of the gravity tractor.
B612 begins Asteroid Discovery Analysis and Mapping (ADAM) project.
B612 announces the Sentinel Space Telescope project.
B612 endorses NEOCam and LSST for 100 m+ solution and stops fundraising for Sentinel project.
2014–2015 B612 releases asteroid-impact video with data from the Comprehensive Nuclear-TestBan Treaty Organization.
2017
Asteroid Institute announces Google and AGI as ADAM technology partners. Asteroid Day holds 2,000+ events worldwide, streams a 48-hour global broadcast. Asteroid Institute publishes synthetic tracking results as a NASA technical report.
Asteroid Institute focuses on providing analytical tools for asteroid-defense scenarios on ADAM.
B612 is lead Founding Partner of Asteroid Day, a global asteroid-awareness campaign.
Asteroid Day moves to Luxembourg and streams a 24-hour global broadcast.
B612’s “Sentinel to Find 500,000 Near-Earth Asteroids” published in IEEE Spectrum.
B612 publishes call for shared solar system map in Financial Times.
Asteroid Day project holds 150 events worldwide.
2014
2012
2010
SENTINEL
200
2 200
200
4
6
2008
B612 funds Caltech research study to validate synthetic tracking feasibility.
E EBAT HIS D P O OR AP RACT IT Y T V A GR
2005 Congress gives NASA goal of finding 90 percent of asteroids larger than 140 meters, called the George E. Brown, Jr. NearEarth Object Survey Act.
2006 United Nations ASE NEO Committee initiated.
ASE NEO
EE COMMITT
2012–2013
2016
2018
A 19 m meteor explodes over Chelyabinsk, Russia, injuring over 1,500 people and damaging thousands of buildings across six cities.
NASA announces Planetary Defense Coordination Office.
Pew Research poll shows Americans believe asteroid monitoring should be national priority.
2014–2015
2017
UN Committee on Peaceful Uses of Outer Space and General Assembly pass resolution creating International Asteroid Warning Network (IAWN).
DART (Double Asteroid Redirection Test) is funded.
Construction for Large Synoptic Survey Telescope (LSST) begins.
OSIRIS-REx mission to asteroid Bennu launches.
Asteroid Impact and Deflection Assessment (AIDA) almost funded by EU and USA.
United Nations Office for Outer Space Affairs (OOSA) publishes Planetary Defence Report.
2019
2020
2021
2023
Asteroid Institute research on deflection impulses to move asteroids presented at Planetary Defense Conference.
Asteroid Institute paper “Required deflection impulses as a function of time before impact for Earth-impacting asteroids” published in Icarus.
ADAM team releases opensource code THOR and is published in the Astronomical Journal.
ADAM::Precovery service publicly launches and discovers new observations of PHA 2022 SF289.
Asteroid Institute hosts ADAM hackathons (virtual in 2020).
B612 sponsors and presents at virtual Planetary Defense Conference.
Asteroid Day goes virtual and broadcasts 30 days of Asteroid Day TV.
B612 sponsors and presents LSST Solar System Science Collaboration Conference.
Schweickart Prize launches to recognize young researchers for their contributions to asteroid science, research, and policy work.
ADAM engineering team hired.
2022
Asteroid Day celebrates 5th anniversary and streams 21day global broadcast. B612 launches ADAM Engineer Funding campaign.
The New York Times announces news of the first 104 asteroids found by Asteroid Institute using THOR on ADAM.
B612 sponsors and presents LSST Solar System Science Collaboration Conference. Asteroid Institute presents at Asteroids, Comets, Meteors Conference.
0
TRACKIN G
ASTERO ID
ASTER OID D AY DISCOV ERY A NALYS IS AN D MA
20 22
202
SYNTHETIC
2018
2016
Asteroid Institute launches precovery API on ADAM.
B612 sponsors and presents at the Planetary Defense Conference.
PPIN G (AD AM)
RESE ARC H FE LLO WS
2019
2020
2021
Hayabusa2 spacecraft surveys asteroid Ryugu.
LSST changes its name to the Vera C. Rubin Observatory.
25th Anniversary of NEAR Shoemaker mission.
Associated Press research shows Americans believe asteroid monitoring should be a national priority.
Hayabusa2 collects asteroid Ryugu samples and heads back to Earth.
Hayabusa2 returns asteroid Ryugu sample to Earth.
Hera mission funded.
OSIRIS-REx collects a sample of asteroid Bennu.
OSIRIS-REx heads back to Earth with asteroid Bennu sample. DART mission launches.
2022 DART spacecraft successfully crashes into Dimorphos altering the asteroid’s orbit.
2023 OSIRIS-REx returns to Earth with samples of asteroid Bennu. NASA launches Psyche spacecraft to metallic asteroid 16 Psyche. Pew Research poll shows Americans believe asteroid monitoring should be national priority.
ASTEROID INSTITUTE TEAM & COLLABORATORS* Colleen Fiaschetti, Director Special Projects BA, Seattle University, Graphic Design Colleen joined in fall of 2022. She holds over a decade of experience organizing and leading programs, crafting clear communication for complex topics. She brings diverse experience in creative leadership, relationship management, and planning. Her previous experience includes leading Asteroid Day Global in Luxembourg. Delphine Veronese-Milin, Science & Operations Associate BA, University of California, Berkeley, Astrophysics Delphine joined in spring 2023. She received a bachelor’s degree in Astrophysics from University of California Berkeley and is currently working towards a master’s in Data Science from Harvard University. Prior to joining the team, she interned at NASA Ames where her work centered on creating cratering models for Saturn’s moons.
SUMMER INTERNS Tanay Bhadra, USA
Mallory Helfenbein, USA
Pursuing BA
Pursuing BA
UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA, BERKELEY
UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA, BERKELEY
Physics, Astrophysics
Astrophysics, Data Science
Jonathan Lee, USA
Eli Lingat, USA
Pursuing BA
Pursuing BS
BROWN UNIVERSITY
UNIVERSITY OF WASHINGTON
Computer Science
Physics, Astronomy
Amelia Whitlow, USA
Sherry Yang, China
Pursuing BS
Pursuing BS
UNIVERSITY OF WASHINGTON
UNIVERSITY OF WASHINGTON
Astronomy, Physics
Computer Science, Engineering
* This list does not represent all of the researchers 16
TEAM & COLLABORATORS
and collaborators at the Asteroid Institute.
Alec Koumjian, Head of Engineering BS, Marlboro College, Physics + Computer Science Alec joined in fall of 2022 and has over 12 years of experience deploying software and leading engineering teams. His prior roles include CTO, Principal Engineer, VP of Engineering, and founder. He has built APIs, job systems, ETL, MLOps systems, CI/CD pipelines, frontend, and mobile apps. He is an experienced product owner and product manager, overseeing both strategic and tactical product development.
Spencer Nelson, Principal Software Engineer BS, Northwestern University, Astrophysics Spencer joined in early 2023 with a focus on software design and architecture and a background in large-scale distributed systems and reliability. He has previous experience at Rubin Observatory, Amazon Web Services, and was among the early members of the Twitch.tv team. At Northwestern, he worked on statistical and computational measurements of molecular concentrations in star-forming regions.
Dr. Joachim Moeyens, Research Software Engineer PhD, University of Washington, Astronomy Joachim joined in early 2023 and has a dual appointment at the University of Washington and Asteroid Institute. In 2021, he was awarded an Asteroid Institute fellowship, which led to him completing his PhD in 2022. He leads the development of the Tracklet-less Heliocentric Orbit Recovery (THOR) algorithm—a next-generation asteroid discovery algorithm designed to find asteroids in datasets not historically suited for such searches.
TEAM & COLLABORATORS
17
ASTEROID
EDUCATION
ASTEROID DAY GLOBAL For the eighth year in a row, B612 was a proud sponsor of Asteroid Day, celebrated annually on June 30th and recognized by the United Nations internationally. Asteroid Day 2023 saw more than 450 events registered and still counting. Independent event organizers hosted a plethora of engaging activities, from augmented-reality simulations to quizzes and workshops. On June 30th, asteroid experts, scientists, and astronauts (including our strategic advisor and Romanian cosmonaut Dumitru-Dorin Prunariu) converged in Luxembourg to share advances in the field. With a familyoriented program, folks could hear from visiting speakers on the main stage or participate in learning activities, from painting on a giant papier-mache asteroid to programming space rovers and launching Lego rockets. While experts gathered in Luxembourg, the worldwide team of organizers produced their own independent events: • In Bologna, Italy, the INAF Sorvegliati Spaziali hosted an exhibition of rare meteorites and relics from the Tunguska and Chelyabinsk events. The event also included Augmented Reality (AR) asteroid-impact simulations. • In Rochechouart, France, the Center for International Research and Restitution on Impact and on Rochechouart (CIRIR) hosted multiple events, attracting young artists to participate in a drawing competition, while astronomers and researchers from the region showcased posters in an exhibition. • At the California Academy of Sciences in San Francisco, volunteers and Asteroid Institute team members educated the public on our work, and provided children photo-booth opportunities with cutouts of astronauts Ed Lu and Rusty Schweickart. • The park in Gancedo, Argentina, known for housing the massive El Chaco meteorite, buzzed with activities centered around asteroids. With widespread media coverage, excursions and caravans from various cities brought the public together for a full day of scientific and cultural experiences. • The Al-Najm Al-Thaqib Astronomical Association in Algeria invited the public to interact with astronomers and learn about the positioning of asteroids through informative posters showcasing the solar system. Astronomy clubs and organizations around the world took the opportunity to educate people about asteroids in their own cultures, in their own personalized way. These organizations help shift the global movement to a local and meaningful conversation.
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ASTEROID DAY GLOBAL
ASTEROID
EDUCATION
The Asteroid Education program increases awareness about asteroids and science through public speaking and exposure in the media. In addition to Asteroid Day, this year we shared stories about our work and why the world should learn more about asteroids. We have highlighted a few public education activities from this last year.
Dr. Ed Lu
Dr. Ed Lu
RAINBOW MANSION
CALIFORNIA ACADEMY OF SCIENCES
Dr. Ed Lu gave a talk at the Rainbow Mansion,
Dr. Ed Lu presented the case for a four-
a storied intentional community of young
dimensional map of the solar system at
space entrepreneurs. After the presentation,
the California Academy of Sciences Dean
a Q&A took place with discussions on future
Lectures. “Location-based services of the
scientific explorations and resource utilization.
solar system are going to be the key to the economic development of space,” he said.
March
June
Rusty Schweickart
B612 20th Anniversary Celebration
TEDxSONOMA
CALIFORNIA ACADEMY OF SCIENCES
“We have the technology today to find
B612 celebrated our 20th Anniversary this
asteroids and predict their impact,” said
year with the launch of the Schweickart
Rusty Schweickart in his TEDxSonoma talk
Prize, a planetarium show, and evening
where he highlighted B612’s work in asteroid
event. Achievements over the years include
detection and the importance of protecting
inventing the Gravity Tractor, co-creating
humankind from these cosmic collisions.
the United Nations NEO Committee, and establishing new technologies such as ADAM and THOR.
20
ASTEROID EDUCATION
Kathleen Kiker
Asteroid Institute
THE PATH PODCAST
AVIATION WEEK NETWORK
Asteroid Institute engineer Kathleen Kiker
“With ADAM::Precovery we had the answer
joined Casey Moninghoff on The Path Podcast
in minutes. It felt like Googling the imaged
for an interview exploring the importance of
sky!” said Dr. Zeljko Iveziv Director of the
asteroid research and tools that have been
Rubin Observatory in an article in Aviation
developed to understand, map, and navigate
Week Network featuring Asteroid Institute’s
our solar system.
Precovery service and its future applications in asteroid research.
July
August
Dr. Ed Lu MBN-USAGM “ALHURRA TONIGHT” Dr. Ed Lu was interviewed on Middle East Broadcasting exploring the application of AI in asteroid research and detection, and how it can be used to avoid future impacts.
ASTEROID EDUCATION
21
ASTEROID
EDUCATION
Schweickart Prize On June 30th, B612 celebrated International Asteroid Day by launching the Schweickart Prize, a distinguished accolade named after our co-founder, Apollo 9 astronaut Rusty Schweickart. This prize recognizes exceptional contributions to the field of planetary defense and the advancement of humanity’s cosmic journey, and underscores the importance of collective responsibility in safeguarding our transition into the wider cosmos. Awardees will receive $10,000 USD along with global exposure through a press campaign and will be presented with a unique award featuring a museum-quality meteorite, symbolizing the prize’s existential purpose. Dr. Franklin Chang-Díaz, NASA astronaut and CEO of Ad Astra Rocket Co, commended Schweickart’s role in elevating the issue of planetary defense through the Association of Space Explorers, which led to global discussions at the United Nations. The prize is a fitting tribute to Schweickart’s lifetime of leadership. Anousheh Ansari, CEO of XPRIZE and private space explorer, emphasized the prize’s alignment with Earth’s preservation from threats, making it a beacon of achievement for those working on asteroid-impact prevention. “I’ve seen how prizes are able to really bring about innovation and create excitement and awareness and change mindset. I’m hoping that this prize will embody everything that Rusty has demonstrated throughout his career.” Awarded on an annual basis starting in 2024, the Schweickart Prize targets graduate students in the fields of asteroid-threat detection, mitigation strategies, civil protection, public education, or responsibilities for geopolitical decisions. Schweickart Prize nominations opened this October at Schweickartprize.org. The prize committee includes experts in astronomy, planetary science, aerospace, and space policy including Anousheh Ansari, Dr. Richard Binzel, Dr. Jeffrey Hoffman, Dr. Irmgard Marboe, Dr. Patrick Michel, Dr. Hong-Kyu Moon, Oliver Morton, Dr. Soichi Noguchi, Dr. Dorin Prunariu, Dr. Frans G. von der Dunk, and other esteemed members. Founding Sponsors of the Schweickart Prize include Anousheh Ansari, Barringer Crater Company, B612 Foundation, Future Ventures, Geoffrey Notkin, Jurvetson Family Foundation, Meteor Crater, Randy Schweickart and Michelle Heng, Rusty B. Schweickart and Joanne Keys, and others.
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SCHWEICKART PRIZE Photos by Christopher Che
FOUNDING CIRCLE ANONYMOUS x 7
Dane Glasgow
Bill Anders
Steve and Julie Grimm
Geoffrey Baehr
Garrett Gruener and Amy Slater
William K. Bowes, Jr. Foundation*
VK Hsu & Sons Foundation Ltd.
Brian Burton and James Mercer,
James D. and Justin Jameson
Broken Bells Don Carlson
Steve Jurvetson*
Vinton and Sigrid Cerf
Dominik Kaiser
Y(lmc) and Clark Chapman
Steve Krausz
Emily and David Corrigan
Vladas Lašas
Asa Denton
James Leszczenski
Esther Dyson
David Liddle and Ruthann Quindlen
Alan Eustace
Suzanna Mak
Sasha Galitsky
Greg and Lacey McAdoo
Eliot Gillum
Scott McGregor and Laurie Girand
Glaser Progress Foundation
John Montrym
*Leadership Gift ($1 M–$5 M)
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FOUNDING CIRCLE
Margaret Jonsson Family Foundation
ASTEROID CIRCLE Matt Mullenweg
ANONYMOUS
Diane Murphy
Rick Armstrong
Peter Norvig
Barringer Crater Company
Shervin Pishevar
Rodney Brooks
Peggy Rawls Family Fund
Jim Chervenak
Ray Rothrock
Explorers Club
Edwin Sahakian
Lynn and Anisya Fritz
Rusty Schweickart and Nancy Ramsey
Arthur Gleckler and Kristine Kelly
Tim Trueman
Jensen Huang
Robert C. and Fallon B. Vaughn
Tito’s Handmade Vodka*
Matthew and Sarah Welty Ben Wheeler Yishan Wong and Kimberly Algeri-Wong Matthew Wyndowe
Pictured at Meteor Crater in Arizona, May 2023: (First row, left to right) Meghan McCandless, Allan Posner, Elyse Posner, Sarah Gilman, Delphine Veronese-Milin, Kathleen Kiker, Rakan El-Khalil, Bob Zucker, Steve Krausz (Second row, left to right) Danica Remy, Merel Kennedy, Nicholas Brysiewicz, Henry Elkus, Ann-Kathrin Rudel, Will Jack, Daniel Keller, Cristiana Brusco, Leonardo Mascaro, Orion Manley, Anmar El-Khalil, Niles Tilenius (Third Row, left to right) Colleen Fiaschetti, Tim Trueman, Adrian Lurssen, Nate Tellis, Marc Bielas, Kezie Nwachukwu, Cameron Najafi, Massy Mascaro, Eric Tilenius, Scott Manley ASTEROID CIRCLE
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We have donors from 46 countries.
COMMUNITY OF SUPPORTERS Gifts $500–$24,999*
Anousheh Ansari
Joel and Joy Kellman
David and Abby Rumsey
Juli Betwee
Isabella Kirkland and Chris Tellis
Jack and Betty Schafer
Joseph Biernat
Robert Klepa
Scott Schneider
Richard Bowen
Aki Korhonen
Stacy Schusterman
John Clendenin
Lee Kuyper
Peter and Cathleen Schwartz
John Conery
Samuel Lichtenstein
Randy Schweickart and Michelle Heng
George Cornecelli
Christine and Ed Lu
Russell Schweickart and Joanne Keys
Jonathan Dagle
Robert Macartney
Rick Stawicki
Sean Devine
Massimo Mascaro
Stroum Family Foundation
Tyler Edwards
John Kenneth Menges Jr
Tarpenning-Schillinger Family Fund
Albert Ender
David and Janet Morrison
Angie and Richard Thieriot
Ray Erikson
Tom Moss
Eric W. Tilenius
Frank Fiaschetti
Jonathan Nagin
Newell and Alice Troup
Joseph Fischer
Geoffrey Notkin
James and Cynthia Walker
Dennis and Pamela Fisco
Scott Penberthy
Rogers Weed
Future Ventures
Alex Popa
Al Werner
Patrick Garvey
Mitchell Portnoy
George and Loretta Whitesides
John Geesman
Dirk Pranke
Clare Whitfield
Jeffrey Hungerford
Christian Principi
Lawrence Wilkinson
Robert Jedicke
Matthew Ramsey
Jon Winston
Jurvetson Family Foundation
David Ramsey
William and Anya Wright
Jeanne-Marie Kaufmann
Ron and Kirstie Rosano
* From September 1, 2022,to October 1, 2023 Fisheye view of Arizona and Utah. Photo by Ed Lu from the ISS Cover: Brazil Photo by Ed Lu from the ISS
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COMMUNITY OF SUPPORTERS
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
B612 FOUNDATION
HEADQUARTERED
Peter Schwartz, Chair
Danica Remy, President
IN SILICON VALLEY
Geoffrey Baehr
Joelle Byars, Writer & Operations Associate
Dr. Clark Chapman, Co-Founder
Colleen Fiaschetti, Director of Special Projects
Dr. Dan Durda
Merel Kennedy, Graphic Design
Garrett Gruener
Delphine Veronese-Milin, Science & Operations Associate
Dr. Ed Lu, Co-Founder Danica Remy, President
MAILING ADDRESS
20 Sunnyside Ave., Suite F Mill Valley, CA 94941 United States Phone 650-644-4539 www.b612.ai www.b612foundation.org
Lawrence Wilkinson
ASTEROID INSTITUTE, A PROGRAM OF B612
ASTEROID DAY, A PROGRAM OF B612
Dr. Ed Lu, Executive Director
Anna Bordus, Program Director, Luxembourg
ADAM PROJECT TEAM
Rhea Abdo, Communications Coordinator, France
Alec Koumjian, Head of Engineering
Saulo Machado, Global Event Coordinator, Brazil
Kathleen Kiker, Software Engineer
Dr. Brian May, Co-Founder, United Kingdom
Dr. Joachim Moeyens, Research Engineer
Danica Remy, Co-Founder, California, USA
Spencer Nelson, Principal Software Engineer
Grig Richters, Co-Founder, Germany
Allan Posner, Engineer and Astrodynamicist
Rusty Schweickart, Co-Founder, California, USA
Nate Tellis, Software Engineer
RESEARCH COLLABORATORS
ADAM PROJECT INTERNS
Aidan Berres, Software Developer
Tanay Bhadra, University of California, Berkeley, USA
Dr. Marc Buie, Mission Scientist
Mallory Helfenbein, University of California, Berkeley, USA
John Carrico, Astrodynamicist
Jonathan Lee, Brown University, USA
Dr. Siegfried Eggl, Research Collaborator
Eli Lingat, University of Washington, USA
Hank Grabowski, Engineer and Astrodynamicist
Amelia Whitlow, University of Washington, USA
Dr. Sarah Greenstreet, Senior Researcher
Sherry Yang, University of Washington, China
Dr. Scott Hubbard, Mission Strategist Dr. Mario Juric, Research Collaborator Emmie King, Software Engineer Mike Loucks, Astrodynamicist Samira Motiwala, Astrodynamicist Dr. Harold Reitsema, Mission Director Jeff Rothermel, Avionics Engineer Dr. Sam Waldman, Avionics Engineer Dr. Vivek Vittaldev, Mission Researcher
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