Asteroid size of Gibraltar

Asteroid size of Gibraltar

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Discussion

jmorgan

Original Poster:

36,010 posts

285 months

Wednesday 19th April 2017
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Eric Mc

122,096 posts

266 months

Wednesday 19th April 2017
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Only four times further than the moon.

jmorgan

Original Poster:

36,010 posts

285 months

Wednesday 19th April 2017
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Aye, but we knew this one was there....

XM5ER

5,091 posts

249 months

Thursday 20th April 2017
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There seem to be quite a few asteroids and comets shaped like this, I wonder if there is an underlying reason?

Eric Mc

122,096 posts

266 months

Thursday 20th April 2017
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I can think of two.

Boring_Chris

2,348 posts

123 months

Thursday 20th April 2017
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ash73 said:
The "at a glance" box at the foot of the article is interesting, the most worrying thing is it says "current space technology would require a four-year advance warning in order to prepare any sort of intercept mission." We'd better get on with improving on that.
Whilst watching that documentary featuring Bruce Willis and his mates blowing up a planet killing asteroid, the clever clever man with the British accent suggested that merely smashing it with a couple of nuclear warheads would risk turning one falling object into many... (that quote might have been from War of the Worlds featuring Will Smith? Anyways... )

... what's to problem with simply hoying a couple mega bombs up there and literally smashing one to bits? The 'bits' should then be small enough to burn up in the atmosphere?

Can anyone pick holes in my logic? Or am I now smarter than Bruce Willis / Will Smith / NASA?

LimaDelta

6,533 posts

219 months

Thursday 20th April 2017
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Can we give it to the Spanish?

AshVX220

5,929 posts

191 months

Thursday 20th April 2017
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XM5ER said:


There seem to be quite a few asteroids and comets shaped like this, I wonder if there is an underlying reason?
I'm guessing two objects hit each other with sufficient energy to fuse them together.

Roofless Toothless

5,688 posts

133 months

Saturday 22nd April 2017
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AshVX220 said:
XM5ER said:


There seem to be quite a few asteroids and comets shaped like this, I wonder if there is an underlying reason?
I'm guessing two objects hit each other with sufficient energy to fuse them together.
Funny how the left one's always bigger.