DeathDart
Graduate Poster
- Joined
- Jun 23, 2011
- Messages
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A hyper velocity asteroid impact at a velocity greater than 100 kms can easily punch through the crust and penetrate 100’s of miles into the mantle. At some depth in the Mantle the material appears to be elevated in Uranium and REE. Mantle plumes are the origin for the Uranium found in black shales. The uranium did not precipitate out of seawater as some would argue. The uranium can also indicate strata related to extinctions such as the end of the Permian. The Siberian Basalts started with a hyper velocity impact. Fifty percent of all species alive at this time went extinct.
A hyper velocity asteroid impact is quite different in its effects on the surface. At these high velocities the shock wave is much slower than the passage of the object. Less of the objects total energy is expended by shockwaves. The shockwave energy is the force applied multiplied by the interaction time. Less time for interaction (higher velocity), the less total energy lost to a surface shockwave.
So the surface crater is not very big. They do produce a lot of flood basalts because the detonation of the asteroid produces massive heating of huge volumes of magma. Plus a lot of lighter surface material gets dragged deep into the mantle.
A hyper velocity asteroid impact is quite different from one at 15 kilometers per second (kms) kilometers per second. Because of orbital physics anything going faster than about 50 kms has to come from outside the Solar System. Nothing can enter this Solar System from the universe because the Solar System is protected by a force field.
Star proper motion for nearby stars converted to linear relative motion can produce a velocity difference of 25 to 400+ kms. Guess who is coming to dinner and it isn’t Sidney Poitier.
The majority of stars that go past the solar system are red or brown dwarfs. These stars burn very slowly, and can last for over a 100 billion years. They can be nearly the age of the universe. They may have orbiting asteroids left over from their formation, these asteroids would also be old.
The age of the passing stars can be important if the 238U/235U ratio found in impact related material is not the Solar Systems 137.8. It is now standard to spike with 235U so this ratio is always assumed to be 137.8 Any evidence to the contrary is not documented.
If they are fast enough they tend to punch through the earth’s crust (25 miles thick) without leaving much of a crater. They do produce a lot of flood basalts.
Newtons argument that when enough material (mass) is accelerated by the impacting object, the object stops is only true if the impacting objects surface area remains the same.
An object moving at velocities near or above 100kms may self focus by a very strange mechanism. It may literally collapse into a narrower and denser kinetic object.
The very slow slower impact velocity chosen by Melosh and Ivanov was intentionally deceptive. Impacts do not initiate volcanic eruptions:
Eruptions close to the crater: Geology, v. 31, p. 869–872.
Of course there isn’t any force fields
around anything except Geochronology Centers that could measure the 238U/235U ratio, or any computer facility that could run a computer simulation of a hyper velocity impact. These resources were jealously protected.
The Planet is covered (20 to 30 % of the surface area) in buried craters and hiding that concept makes finding oil a lot harder for people who don’t know that they exist.
A hyper velocity asteroid impact is quite different in its effects on the surface. At these high velocities the shock wave is much slower than the passage of the object. Less of the objects total energy is expended by shockwaves. The shockwave energy is the force applied multiplied by the interaction time. Less time for interaction (higher velocity), the less total energy lost to a surface shockwave.
So the surface crater is not very big. They do produce a lot of flood basalts because the detonation of the asteroid produces massive heating of huge volumes of magma. Plus a lot of lighter surface material gets dragged deep into the mantle.
A hyper velocity asteroid impact is quite different from one at 15 kilometers per second (kms) kilometers per second. Because of orbital physics anything going faster than about 50 kms has to come from outside the Solar System. Nothing can enter this Solar System from the universe because the Solar System is protected by a force field.
Star proper motion for nearby stars converted to linear relative motion can produce a velocity difference of 25 to 400+ kms. Guess who is coming to dinner and it isn’t Sidney Poitier.
The majority of stars that go past the solar system are red or brown dwarfs. These stars burn very slowly, and can last for over a 100 billion years. They can be nearly the age of the universe. They may have orbiting asteroids left over from their formation, these asteroids would also be old.
The age of the passing stars can be important if the 238U/235U ratio found in impact related material is not the Solar Systems 137.8. It is now standard to spike with 235U so this ratio is always assumed to be 137.8 Any evidence to the contrary is not documented.
If they are fast enough they tend to punch through the earth’s crust (25 miles thick) without leaving much of a crater. They do produce a lot of flood basalts.
Newtons argument that when enough material (mass) is accelerated by the impacting object, the object stops is only true if the impacting objects surface area remains the same.
An object moving at velocities near or above 100kms may self focus by a very strange mechanism. It may literally collapse into a narrower and denser kinetic object.
The very slow slower impact velocity chosen by Melosh and Ivanov was intentionally deceptive. Impacts do not initiate volcanic eruptions:
Eruptions close to the crater: Geology, v. 31, p. 869–872.
Of course there isn’t any force fields
The Planet is covered (20 to 30 % of the surface area) in buried craters and hiding that concept makes finding oil a lot harder for people who don’t know that they exist.