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canna change law physics
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Blow it up? Not really helpful. Put an engine on it? Maybe a VASMIR with enough time, but then you have to power the VASMIR.
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James The pessimist complains about the wind; the optimist expects it to change; the engineer adjusts the sails.- William Arthur Ward (1921-1994) Red-beard for President, 2020 |
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canna change law physics
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A good analogy, gun powder lit on fire in a pile vs. contained in a pipe.
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James The pessimist complains about the wind; the optimist expects it to change; the engineer adjusts the sails.- William Arthur Ward (1921-1994) Red-beard for President, 2020 |
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canna change law physics
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Meteor crater in Arizona was formed only about 50,000 years ago.
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James The pessimist complains about the wind; the optimist expects it to change; the engineer adjusts the sails.- William Arthur Ward (1921-1994) Red-beard for President, 2020 |
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like all of the best ideas, it works out on paper...
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canna change law physics
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160 feet (50 meters) across AND it was metallic. Supposed have lost 1/2 its mass before hitting the ground. Not tiny. The Dinosaur killer was 6 miles (10km) across.
Zhamanshin crater is about 10 times larger than Meteor Crater and occurred around 900,000 BC.
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canna change law physics
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The other issue is the size of warheads. We need them to exit earth gravity. Most of the REALLY BIG bombs weighed around 40,000 lbs (20 Tons). The largest object we've sent outside earth gravity was the ExoMars Trace Gas Orbiter last year, and it was 10,000 (5 tons). This is similar to the MK-41, which was 25MT.
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James The pessimist complains about the wind; the optimist expects it to change; the engineer adjusts the sails.- William Arthur Ward (1921-1994) Red-beard for President, 2020 |
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How to Stop a Killer Asteroid | DiscoverMagazine.com
Seems like you'd detonate a nuclear warhead by the asteroid, the radiation would vaporize part of the asteroid, and the reaction force from the gas would deflect the asteroid. The tiniest deflection would be enough. It might not have to be a terribly large warhead. The WW2 bombs weighed 5 tons. We can send a 5 ton payload into orbit, then a launch vehicle, and mate them in orbit. We might not know the composition of the asteroid well enough to predict the exact deflection, but a miss is as good as a mile. We might accidentally fragment the asteroid, but the fragments wouldn't impact Earth unless one of the fragments continued on the exact same course as the original asteroid, which seems unlikely. And if that fragment were significantly smaller than the original asteroid, then it would be more likely to burn up in the atmosphere or cause less damage on impact. Seems like a reasonable thing to try. And we'd want to have the launch vehicle and warhead ready now. Suppose a killer asteroid is discovered 3 years before impact. It might take a year to design, build and launch an interceptor, then it has to travel to meet the asteroid, which will by then be much closer to Earth - the asteroid will be traveling much faster than the interceptor - and a larger deflection will be needed. Better to have the interceptor orbiting the earth and ready to launch. Granted that means a nuclear weapon in orbit. But the US, China and Russia could jointly build the interceptor, so that each nation would be confident there is only one such warhead there. A single orbiting warhead doesn't add that much risk to several thousand warheads already in missiles aimed at each other.
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Nature will start over, probably with bees, that's the most logical place to start.
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"We" can't agree on climate change and yet somehow we're going to get together on this?
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Were we to perfect an astroid destroyer/deflector....the day we put it in place, Yellowstone will beotch slap us silly humans just for fun
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Getting a nuke into space isn't exactly safe, if something goes wrong on take off all of Florida gets a dirty bomb.
The next launch which had been scheduled for after the Challenger disaster in 1986 was to be a nuke powered military satellite. We would have lost more than a school teacher in that one.
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The Metro Times called it the most under reported news story of that year. If we send nukes up into space, let it be from Russia or some far away island.
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When that one goes, it's gonna be lights out for all of us and global warming will be reversed for the next several thousand years. And don't forget the Cascadia Subduction Zone. Scary stuff.
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It's been 630,000 years since that last one so we have plenty of time wait what? |
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least common denominator
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I have no doubt we could figure out a way to do it... we put a man on the moon and robots on Mars and stuff like that.
Question is can we stop trying to kill each other long enough to make it happen (and divert all the money we invest in doing all that killin). I heard on the radio this morning (so it must be true) it would take 3-5 years to plan something like this.
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