welshdean
Michael McDonald 1967 - 2021
- Joined
- Jul 10, 2002
- Messages
- 5,681
Tunguska wasn't an asteroid, it was most likely a comet fragment.
Meh! Every open minded person 'knows' it was an exploding space-ship!

Tunguska wasn't an asteroid, it was most likely a comet fragment.

Ok, question time for all the atronomers on the forums.
Why can't we predict whether or not it will hit us? If it swings past every seven years, doesn't that provide more than enough data for us to determine its orbit?
I'm no expert, but check this site. http://impact.arc.nasa.gov/news_detail.cfm?ID=45
There were several events that were unusually deadly -- a matter of bad luck for 54 million people:
136th Millennium: A 200-yard-wide asteroid hits the South China Sea just 300 miles from Hong Kong. A 40-yard-high tsunami sweeps the coast and kills 18 million people.
During the 133rd Millennium a 1.3-mile-wide comet hits the American Midwest at a speed of 100,000 mph. The blast, equivalent to 3 million megatons of TNT or 60,000 H-bombs, kills 7 million instantly and makes a crater 20 miles across. Within days the skies around the globe darken from the dust injected into the atmosphere. Sunlight is blocked. Crops fail and, over the next year, half of the Earth's human population dies, mainly from starvation.
20th Millennium: An asteroid just 70 yards across explodes in the skies 14 miles above London. 10 million are killed in the 80-megaton blast and firestorm.
273rd Millennium: A 50-yard-wide comet travelling at an unusually fast 150,000 mph explodes in the atmosphere 25 miles above Mexico City. 14 million are killed by the 110-megaton blast and firestorm. 721st Millennium: An almost identical event occurs over Manila, killing 12 million.
how do I know that a 200-yard wide asteroid hitting the ocean at thousands of miles an hour, would cause a very large tsunami that would drown millions?
its called science.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tunguska_event
The Tunguska event is the largest impact event over land in Earth's recent history. Impacts of similar size over remote ocean areas would most likely have gone unnoticed before the advent of global satellite monitoring in the 1960s and 1970s.
I think its fair to say that a 20 foot high tsunami running through the Indian Ocean would drown millions.
Because the moon has been around for billions of years and because the early solar system was a particularly dangerous place.
What's that have to do with Apophis?
This just doesn't sound remotely plausible.
I'm no expert, but check this site. http://impact.arc.nasa.gov/news_detail.cfm?ID=45
There were several events that were unusually deadly -- a matter of bad luck for 54 million people:
136th Millennium: A 200-yard-wide asteroid hits the South China Sea just 300 miles from Hong Kong. A 40-yard-high tsunami sweeps the coast and kills 18 million people. <snip>
Amen. That is the real worry. We could have every meteor down to a foot long in near Earth orbit mapped to a far-the-well, and a high eccentricity comet is still a hazard, particularly as they come at us at much higher velociites than the NEAs do.
That does, it. Mart! Pack up the baby, we've got 133,000 years to get out of here!
a 200-yard wide asteroid impact will be like a sizable nuclear detonation.
and if it hits the ocean, it would create a massive tsunami that could drown/kill millions across the globe.
Question: why are asteroids exploding in the atmosphere? why don't they simply make impact?
The air pressure differences that build up across them are extreme. Most aren't strong enough to remain solid long enough to impact Earth intact. Typically it takes an iron composition to surive. However, shattering doesn't always mean that an impact is completely avoided since the remnants might hit so close together that being shattered makes little difference.Question: why are asteroids exploding in the atmosphere? why don't they simply make impact?
I'm stocking up on cans of Spam as we speak...
Spam and eggs
Spam and sausage and eggs
Spam spam and eggs
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Spam spam ham and eggs with spam spam and spam
Just too make sure I am on the same page here:
Do you mean the asteroid is 200 yards across prior to entering the earths atmosphere, or 200 yards when it actually impacts the ocean.
I suppose the speed the asteroid is travelling is important in determining the energy release. Would the relationship between speed and energy release be linear?
Even they, too, labor under the handicap of never having witnessed anything harsher than the Tunguska event. That will tend to straighten out extrapolations which are only a little off, but which accumulate error along the way, slowly but without correction.The article I linked to refers to estimated damage calculated by software written by http://www.lpl.arizona.edu/Support/f....php?nom=Lewis
I wouldn't dismiss his scenario as not remotely plausible without a very good reason.![]()
Just like how that 30ft high Tsunami from the 2004 Boxing Day Earthquake drowned millions when it ran through the Indian Ocean?
The moon also doesn't have an atmosphere...
I'm no expert, but check this site. http://impact.arc.nasa.gov/news_detail.cfm?ID=45
There were several events that were unusually deadly -- a matter of bad luck for 54 million people:
136th Millennium: A 200-yard-wide asteroid hits the South China Sea just 300 miles from Hong Kong. A 40-yard-high tsunami sweeps the coast and kills 18 million people.
20th Millennium: An asteroid just 70 yards across explodes in the skies 14 miles above London. 10 million are killed in the 80-megaton blast and firestorm.
273rd Millennium: A 50-yard-wide comet travelling at an unusually fast 150,000 mph explodes in the atmosphere 25 miles above Mexico City. 14 million are killed by the 110-megaton blast and firestorm. 721st Millennium: An almost identical event occurs over Manila, killing 12 million.
Question: why are asteroids exploding in the atmosphere? why don't they simply make impact?