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-- Asteroid May Collide With Mars - Jan 30, 2008
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Asteroid May Collide With Mars - Jan 30, 2008
1 in 75 odds is pretty good considering...
What scares me is this thing is 50 Meters across, moving at 13.5 Kilometers per SECOND and nobody noticed it until it was within 7.5 Million Kilometers of Earth. Had it hit Earth, it would have released energy equal to 3 Million Tonnes of TNT and created a crater 1Km wide - about the same as the crater in Arizona.
Best estimates are that it will miss Mars by only 50 000Km.
SOURCE: CNN
SOURCE: NASA
How cool would this be to watch on the 6 o'clock news?!?!
holy shit... thats scary if you think about it man.... like we hear about earthquakes and shit but imagine that thing hit new york or toronto... WOW!
it wouldnt be cool at all.
scary is more like it.
eh what the hell .. as long as i live .. and its not some "i am legend" situation alls good
apparently earth's capability of detecting asteroids are like using a dime and swiping the sky
some deep thoughts getting expressed here.
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| Originally posted by jonnystel holy shit... thats scary if you think about it man.... like we hear about earthquakes and shit but imagine that thing hit new york or toronto... WOW! |
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| Originally posted by barbina it wouldnt be cool at all. scary is more like it. eh what the hell .. as long as i live .. and its not some "i am legend" situation alls good |
Re: Asteroid May Collide With Mars - Jan 30, 2008
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| Originally posted by Dr. DAS 1 in 75 odds is pretty good considering... What scares me is this thing is 50 Meters across, moving at 13.5 Kilometers per SECOND and nobody noticed it until it was within 7.5 Million Kilometers of Earth. Had it hit Earth, it would have released energy equal to 3 Million Tonnes of TNT and created a crater 1Km wide - about the same as the crater in Arizona. Best estimates are that it will miss Mars by only 50 000Km. SOURCE: CNN SOURCE: NASA How cool would this be to watch on the 6 o'clock news?!?! |
Re: Re: Asteroid May Collide With Mars - Jan 30, 2008
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| Originally posted by Zentac_75 Although I don't discredit the story...because I heard it from CNN...I can't help but wonder if those 1 in 75 odds are exagerrated, ala 'killer bees' 'west nile' 'avian flu' 'RED terror alert' etc... Fearoganda aside.... This IS scary shit. Are not the odds of an asteroid hitting Earth 1 in a gazillion?!?!...Mars is WAY too close for comfort. *waiting for an astronomy major to relieve my worries* |
Bruce Willis Will Save The Universe
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| Originally posted by TheNeonAlien Bruce Willis Will Save The Universe |
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| Originally posted by �Zm�zis naaaaa He Dead... |
I prefer an asteroid over an ice age.
Re: Asteroid May Collide With Mars - Jan 30, 2008
| quote: |
| Originally posted by Dr. DAS 1 in 75 odds is pretty good considering... |
Re: Re: Asteroid May Collide With Mars - Jan 30, 2008
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| Originally posted by Zentac_75 *waiting for an astronomy major to relieve my worries* |
Re: Asteroid May Collide With Mars - Jan 30, 2008
| quote: |
| Originally posted by Dr. DAS 1 in 75 odds is pretty good considering... What scares me is this thing is 50 Meters across, moving at 13.5 Kilometers per SECOND and nobody noticed it until it was within 7.5 Million Kilometers of Earth. Had it hit Earth, it would have released energy equal to 3 Million Tonnes of TNT and created a crater 1Km wide - about the same as the crater in Arizona. Best estimates are that it will miss Mars by only 50 000Km. SOURCE: CNN SOURCE: NASA How cool would this be to watch on the 6 o'clock news?!?! |

Re: Re: Re: Asteroid May Collide With Mars - Jan 30, 2008
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| Originally posted by catinthehat (i.e. orbital modifications) |
Re: Re: Re: Asteroid May Collide With Mars - Jan 30, 2008
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| Originally posted by catinthehat here I am... 1) the objects that are big enough to wipe us out wont pop out of nowhere and hit us within 10 days, a la armageddon. we'd have years, probably decades or centuries to plan and try to do something about it (i.e. orbital modifications) 2) if the object is too small to be detected easily, then it's too small to do any significant damage. in this case you can start to reassure yourself that there's alot of surface area across the globe, and the odd of it hitting the surface where you're clubbing that night are low. And last thing. Dont freak out when you hear these reports initially. these arent heading straight for us, these NEOs are orbiting the sun just like us. The way this kind of thing works is like this- first astronomers look at pictures taken from observatories, and see a new "star". they take more pictures and if they see that its moving across the sky, they realize its not a star, but an asteroid in orbit. then based on literally 3 pictures (locations in space), they determine the orbit, but this has lots of error. They feed that orbit into their simulations, and see if sometime down the line where it is going to be coincides with where we're going to be. At this point alarm bells go off and CNN gets the story. What you dont hear is that as soon as this happens, astronomers go back into their records and look for the object in archived exposures from past sky urvey/pictures/etc. this gives them more data points, and reduced the error in the object's orbit. then they feed this newer, more accurate orbit into the sims, and see that its not going to collide after all. if this thing does hit mars, It'll be awesome. |
). I know it is a science...I just find it hard to believe that we can accurately estimate the course of an immense object travelling at unimaginable speeds along a previously uncharted orbit. Finding it in an infinity sky is accomplishment enough. ANYWAY....

Re: Re: Re: Asteroid May Collide With Mars - Jan 30, 2008
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| Originally posted by catinthehat 1) we'd have years, probably decades or centuries to plan and try to do something about it (i.e. orbital modifications) |
Re: Re: Asteroid May Collide With Mars - Jan 30, 2008
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| Originally posted by rabbitjoker The odds are much better that it collides with Uranus... |
Re: Re: Re: Re: Asteroid May Collide With Mars - Jan 30, 2008
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| Originally posted by Zentac_75 I just find it hard to believe that we can accurately estimate the course of an immense object travelling at unimaginable speeds along a previously uncharted orbit. |
Re: Re: Re: Re: Asteroid May Collide With Mars - Jan 30, 2008
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| Originally posted by phlog do you have a source for this? the sky is very big (understatement of the year) and i've read that we have the observational capacity to see only a small fraction of it at a time. in the grand scheme of things, an asteroid hitting one of the planets in our solar system is a non-event. just in '94 astronomers captured 20+ consecutive impacts on Jupiter which were fragments (up to 2KM in diameter) of the same COMET. also, has anyone seen pictures of the far side of our moon (which is obviously much closer to us than mars), it's covered in craters from asteroid/meteor impacts. regardless, we have bigger problems to worry about. |
Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Asteroid May Collide With Mars - Jan 30, 2008
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| Originally posted by Cosmic Fur Yeah, math IS pretty hard thing to believe. |
Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Asteroid May Collide With Mars - Jan 30, 2008
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| Originally posted by EvilTree Jupiter and the Moon don't have existing lifeforms... |
If there is life on Mars, which is belived to exist in ice under the surface if it exists anywhere, the impact from an asteroid would create a fresh crater and stir up all kinds of dust. I doubt anything would survive the impact at ground zero, but it would give our rovers an excellent place to explore the underlying layers of the martian environment.
...or a bunch of Marvin the Martians will come running out of the crater screaming "oh noes!"
Monkeys MAY fly out of my butt.
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