This visualization shows the solar system trajectories of asteroids discovered by ADAM and THOR. (Credit: B612 Asteroid Institute / Univ. of Wash. DiRAC Institute / OpenSpace Project)

A team of asteroid hunters that includes researchers at the University of Washington says it has identified 27,500 new, high-confidence asteroid discovery candidates — not by making fresh observations of the night sky, but by sifting through archives of astronomical data.

The weeks-long database search was conducted by the Asteroid Institute, a program of the nonprofit B612 Foundation, in partnership with UW’s DiRAC Institute and Google Cloud.

The two institutes developed a program called THOR, which stands for “Tracklet-less Heliocentric Orbit Recovery.” THOR runs on a cloud-based, open-source platform known as ADAM (“Asteroid Discovery Analysis and Mapping”). The program can analyze the positions of millions of moving points of light observed in the sky over a given period of time, and link those points together in ways that are consistent with orbital paths.

Google Cloud’s Office of the CTO collaborated with the Asteroid Institute to fine-tune its algorithms for Google Cloud. The project analyzed 5.4 billion observations drawn from the NOIRLab Source Catalog Data Release 2.

“What is exciting is that we are using electrons in data centers, in addition to the usual photons in telescopes, to make astronomical discoveries,” Ed Lu, executive director of the Asteroid Institute, said in a news release.

Most of the 27,500 asteroid discovery candidates are in the main belt, between the orbits of Mars and Jupiter. But the candidates also include more than 100 apparent near-Earth asteroids.

Chart showing dramatic rise in asteroid candidate discoveries
The candidates identified by the Asteroid Institute and Google Cloud would represent a significant addition to the minor-planet database once the discoveries have been confirmed. (B612 ASteroid Institute Graphic)

The Asteroid Institute’s long-term goal is to create an observational system that can flag potentially threatening near-Earth objects long before they approach our planet. Confirming the detections can be a laborious task, but the institute is exploring the use of Google’s artificial-intelligence tools to streamline the process.

Astronomers are expecting the flow of data to turn into a flood once the Vera C. Rubin Observatory begins science operations in Chile in 2025.

“Asteroid Institute results are more than exciting for the Vera C. Rubin Observatory: They may help us re-optimize our observing strategy and obtain gains for some science programs, such as cosmologically important supernovae explosions, equivalent to cloning another Rubin Observatory,” said UW astronomer Zeljko Ivezic, who serves as the observatory’s construction project director.

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