Posted on 02/12/2025 6:38:57 AM PST by BenLurkin
2032? No worries we will all be dead from Climate Change by then
"Mr. President, I'm not saying we wouldn't get our hair mussed, but I do say no more than 10 to 20 million killed, tops! Uh, depending on the breaks."
Question...what would happen if it struck the moon? How could that impact us?
What gave it away was the sign in the passenger lounge at the point of origin. “Unscheduled Stop: A Planet.”
Seldom considered in writing about using a nuclear bomb on incoming comets is the effect of blasting it into smaller pieces. Each piece slightly pushed sideways in its trajectory, but each much smaller mass.
Rocky asteroids and metallic objects? Less likely to split up, but the modern wave-of-hand bit of using thrusters (since nuclear bombs are yucky on campus) seems to always “First, let us assume the object is a uniform spherical cow.”
Yes, a bomb imparts little blast impulse sideways. We need way of “pushing” a solid, irregular, long and spinning irregular mass in space.
Could knock chunks of the moon off, which may then end up impacting earth. But the chunks would likely be much smaller than the original asteroid.
George C. Scott, Dr. Strangelove 1961, worth a watch!
George C. Scott, Dr. Strangelove 1961, worth a watch!
Yeah,
Self important BS that is really a sales pitch and political rallying cry.
One good hickup of the sun, and we’re all gone. One good flare up by the sun, and we’re all gone. One big rock from space and we’re all gone.
Meanwhile, some activist will have you think your plastic shopping bag will end all life on the planet.
If this size object hit the moon? Nothing. Nothing but a bright flash.
Excellent movie.
Classic. One worth rewatching occasionally.
It’ll wipe out our cheese supply
I’ll be wearing a mask so I’ll be fine /s
If it were to strike the Moon, there'd be ejecta, some of which would over time rain into the Earth's atmosphere and make pretty bursts of "shooting stars". There's also a chance that some of these chunks would be large and sturdy enough to burn their way through to Earth's surface.
The mask won't save you, but the Pfizer Tunguska vaccine to be introduced in 2030, followed, of course, by annual Tunguska booster shots, will no doubt be heavily promoted (using taxpayers dollars) perhaps will ... assuming the side effects don't kill you.
Yawn
Tektites, we'd get a LOT of lunar tektites!
[snip] 2024 YR4 is estimated to be about 130 to 300 feet (40 – 90 meters) wide and... is large enough to cause localized damage in the unlikely event that it should impact Earth [/snip]2024 YR4 | science.nasa.gov
...sidebar...
[snip] Forty-nine thousand years ago, a large 30 to 50 meter diameter iron asteroid impacted the Colorado Plateau in northern Arizona. The resulting massive explosion excavated 175 million tons of rock, forming a crater nearly a mile wide and 570 feet deep. (Click here to learn about the geology of the region). While the Meteor Crater* impact event was too small to cause global environmental effects, its regional damage would have been significant... The probable sum of these effects is the destruction of vegetation over an area 800 to 1500 km2. Damage to vegetation would have extended over an additional 200 to 600km2. Animals within 3 to 4 km of the impact site would probably been killed, with maiming injuries extending out to distances of ~16 to 24 km. While these effects are severe, they are confined to the immediate region and did not cause extinctions... These types of events, however, are large enough to destroy a modern city. They occur at an average rate of about once in 6000 years. [/snip]Barringer Crater | www.lpi.usra.edu
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.