Discussion
https://www.space.com/17933-nasa-television-webcas...
Live webcast with
Host: Brian Cox, physicist, School of Physics and Astronomy, Uni of Manchester
Rusty Schweickart, US Apollo 9 Astronaut; Co-founder of Asteroid Day and B612
Ed Lu, three time US Shuttle Astronaut; Co-founder, B612
Dorin Prunariu, first Romanian Astronaut; ASE president, UN COPUOS
Michel Tognini, two time ESA astronaut, trained French Air Force pilot
Jean-François Clervoy, three time ESA astronautandFrench engineer
Nicole Stott, two time US Shuttle Astronaut, Aquanaut and SciArt Advocate
Susan McKenna-Lawlor, astrophysicist, Principal Investigator, Giotto
Julia De Leon, astrophysicist, Instituto Astrofísica de Canarias
Mark Boslough, physicist Chair of Asteroid Day Expert Panel
Patrick Michel, planetary scientist, researcher at the CNRS
Marco Fuchs, Owner and CEO OHB SE
Etienne Schneider, Deputy Prime Minister of Luxembourg"
Interesting.
Live webcast with
Host: Brian Cox, physicist, School of Physics and Astronomy, Uni of Manchester
Rusty Schweickart, US Apollo 9 Astronaut; Co-founder of Asteroid Day and B612
Ed Lu, three time US Shuttle Astronaut; Co-founder, B612
Dorin Prunariu, first Romanian Astronaut; ASE president, UN COPUOS
Michel Tognini, two time ESA astronaut, trained French Air Force pilot
Jean-François Clervoy, three time ESA astronautandFrench engineer
Nicole Stott, two time US Shuttle Astronaut, Aquanaut and SciArt Advocate
Susan McKenna-Lawlor, astrophysicist, Principal Investigator, Giotto
Julia De Leon, astrophysicist, Instituto Astrofísica de Canarias
Mark Boslough, physicist Chair of Asteroid Day Expert Panel
Patrick Michel, planetary scientist, researcher at the CNRS
Marco Fuchs, Owner and CEO OHB SE
Etienne Schneider, Deputy Prime Minister of Luxembourg"
Interesting.
You may jest, but......
http://www.passc.net/EarthImpactDatabase/Worldmap....
Now then, we have not found them all and craters are not left in water......
http://www.passc.net/EarthImpactDatabase/Worldmap....
Now then, we have not found them all and craters are not left in water......
There is so much coming out now about these, finding many and there will be more to be found, the earth has been around a long time as we have not experienced such an event it is difficult for us to imagine what it would be like. it will happen though, and it will be unbelievable.
We are not prepared for it and probably never will be.
We are not prepared for it and probably never will be.
The crater remained unfound not because the impact hit the water but because over millennia sea floor spreading, continental drift and other geological processes had gradually hidden it,. I would guess that a fairly sizeable crater would have been visible for around 10 million years after the event before earth's geological processes and weathering covered it up.
It is estimated that the asteroid that hit was around the size of Mount Everest. That would make it about five to six miles across. It struck what was then a fairly shallow sea - only a few thousand feet deep at most so it would have been like shooting a melon with a bullet. The sea would have acted like the melon's skin.
It is estimated that the asteroid that hit was around the size of Mount Everest. That would make it about five to six miles across. It struck what was then a fairly shallow sea - only a few thousand feet deep at most so it would have been like shooting a melon with a bullet. The sea would have acted like the melon's skin.
They all have some info if it is available on that site. 150km diameter Aprox.
http://www.passc.net/EarthImpactDatabase/chicxulub...
http://www.passc.net/EarthImpactDatabase/chicxulub...
jmorgan said:
You may jest, but......
http://www.passc.net/EarthImpactDatabase/Worldmap....
Now then, we have not found them all and craters are not left in water......
The aliens don't like the Aussies or Yanks do they? http://www.passc.net/EarthImpactDatabase/Worldmap....
Now then, we have not found them all and craters are not left in water......
Wobbegong said:
jmorgan said:
You may jest, but......
http://www.passc.net/EarthImpactDatabase/Worldmap....
Now then, we have not found them all and craters are not left in water......
The aliens don't like the Aussies or Yanks do they? http://www.passc.net/EarthImpactDatabase/Worldmap....
Now then, we have not found them all and craters are not left in water......
I guessed it was surveying for mineral etc. that has done that more than aliens.
We will never know........
Near misses should always be seen as opportunities, it won't be long before we are able to send up craft to circularise and exploit the bountiful resources held within some of these asteroids.
Can you imagine it, enough rare earth metals to destabilise the global economy flying around the earth, able to be deorbited anywhere with minimal energy spend, or used in orbit for construction, the next great step in human evolution.
Pioneers are seeing this as a possibility within the next 20 to 40 years.
Can you imagine it, enough rare earth metals to destabilise the global economy flying around the earth, able to be deorbited anywhere with minimal energy spend, or used in orbit for construction, the next great step in human evolution.
Pioneers are seeing this as a possibility within the next 20 to 40 years.
caelite said:
it won't be long before we are able to send up craft to circularise and exploit the bountiful resources held within some of these asteroids.
Really? Megatonnes of mass and some kps of delta-v? Far, far beyond current capabilities in terms of anything we couldn't just leave to burn up in the atmosphere.Gassing Station | Science! | Top of Page | What's New | My Stuff