Theoretically, we could deflect it. Getting it done in such a short time is a different story though. In reality, in the unlikely event it will hit an inhabited area, we’d evacuate the area & relocate/rebuild.With technology I like our chance of surviving more than the Dinasaur.
Shame on us for not already having a plan in place for these type events.Theoretically, we could deflect it. Getting it done in such a short time is a different story though. In reality, in the unlikely event it will hit an inhabited area, we’d evacuate the area & relocate/rebuild.
I’d be nervous to be around a coastline if it hit an ocean.Meh. Space rocks hit Earth every day. That said, if this one does (it won’t) it would probably hit deep ocean & cause no problems. But if it hits land it would suck for the area it hits.
Enjoy it. Spend baby spend.
If it hits shallower water near the coastline, yeah. Massive wave. But if it hits deep ocean, the wave will dissipate quickly & no harm done. Im probably still getting a few miles away from the coast though.I’d be nervous to be around a coastline if it hit an ocean.
No doubt it hits Jackson. And Chockwe will be out of town.Meh. Space rocks hit Earth every day. That said, if this one does (it won’t) it would probably hit deep ocean & cause no problems. But if it hits land it would suck for the area it hits.
Looks like this asteroid is about same size as Tunguska (150-300 feet vs 160-200 for this one). And Tunguska destroyed 830 sq miles of Forest. So yeah, bad. Very bad if it hits a populated area. There would be climate effects & global cooling for a few years. But no nuclear winter.The Tunguska Event was caused by an asteroid half the size of this one and 1500 square miles were destroyed.
We’re working on it. And we’re pretty close. But you really need to deflect it years before it would hit (don’t need to deflect it as much then). 7 years to accurately measure its orbit and plan & execute the mission & still deflect it enough isn’t long. Especially with the technology in its infancy & barely tested.Shame on us for not already having a plan in place for these type events.
Thats about 17’n right.
Forecasted date of asteroid impact - December 22, 2032
My retirement eligibility date - December 30, 2032
Enjoy it. Spend baby spend.
Is there no plan in place?Shame on us for not already having a plan in place for these type events.
Cause then instead of one large meteorite, we’d have dozens of them all on the same orbit. Not to mention you launch multiple nuclear warheads on a rocket & you’ve just upped the risk of the mission. You might destroy eastern Florida.I never took anything higher than high school physics, so one of you rocket scientist is going to have to explain to me why a few carefully targeted nuclear warheads would not turn this thing into pixie dust.
I would think we probably do.Shame on us for not already having a plan in place for these type events.
Buy honey and store it. It will be like gold. It never spoils.I think you are underestimating it's impact. I highly doubt it hits us but anything of large size will cause major problems. Middle of the ocean would be best case scenario. Nuclear winter would be awesome to try to survive. It would thwart our global warming friends tho. Edited to add: it's only a 3 on the Torino scale. Which is 0 to 10 with 10 being armageddon. Between 40 and 100 meters in diameter so patdog is probly right.
Can we alter it enough just to destroy Gainesville?Cause then instead of one large meteorite, we’d have dozens of them all on the same orbit. Not to mention you launch multiple nuclear warheads on a rocket & you’ve just upped the risk of the mission. You might destroy eastern Florida.
You may eye roll, but I wouldn’t put it past him. He’s got us driving electric cars and having rockets land back on their launch pads.![]()
This guy will figure something out.
Thats about 17’n right.
Forecasted date of asteroid impact - December 22, 2032
My retirement eligibility date - December 30, 2032
Dang right we have a plan...it's Duck and Cover.Shame on us for not already having a plan in place for these type events.
We’re working on it. The problem is it’s a really big 17ing sky, and asteroids like this are no bigger than a football field and they’re really dark.Shouldn’t a tool like A.I. be able to track these? I figured we’ve advanced past Billy Bob telling the president, “It’s a big *** sky, sir.”
Seriously, there is a chance we could deflect this if it’s confirmed to be on path to hit earth (again it won’t).You may eye roll, but I wouldn’t put it past him. He’s got us driving electric cars and having rockets land back on their launch pads.
Imagine a firecracker in the palm of your hand. You set it off, what happens? You burn your hand, right? You close your fist around the same firecracker, and set it off. Your wife's gonna be opening your ketchup bottles the rest of your life.I never took anything higher than high school physics, so one of you rocket scientist is going to have to explain to me why a few carefully targeted nuclear warheads would not turn this thing into pixie dust.