View Poll Results: Would a meteor with the size of Texas wipe out earth?

Voters
336. This poll is closed
  • Yes

    273 81.25%
  • No

    63 18.75%
Page 8 of 10 FirstFirst ...
6
7
8
9
10
LastLast
  1. #141
    Quote Originally Posted by Dashield28 View Post
    Bump it out of the orbit?? LOL this isnt snooker man. Planets and asteroids dont bounce off one another.
    .... Yeah, they do... You assume that

    A. Planets are held in their orbits with no way to move out of them, like a track line... and
    B. There are outside forces to absorb the energy of the collision, causing the force of the impact to diffuse elsewhere...

    I can easily say that neither of these exist on the scale that we are referring to... so QFT if you haven't had an actual astronomy class (college level or higher) in the last decade...

  2. #142
    High Overlord AshestoAsh's Avatar
    10+ Year Old Account
    Join Date
    Oct 2010
    Location
    Orgrimmar Auction House
    Posts
    194
    Most of you are linking blogs written by complete idiots...anyone can write a blog post and say so and so will happen if this happens. Dont get pulled into a random link if its not from a credited source.
    My name is Legion, for we are many

  3. #143
    Scarab Lord xylophone's Avatar
    10+ Year Old Account
    Join Date
    Sep 2010
    Location
    San Diego
    Posts
    4,625
    Quote Originally Posted by Mindark View Post
    "He has space dementia!" lol
    Quote Originally Posted by Wells View Post
    Lets say you have a two 3 inch lines. One is all red and the other is 48% red and 52% blue. Does that mean there's a 50-50 chance they're both red or is the second line matching the all red line by 48%?
    ^^^ Wells using an analogy

  4. #144
    The asteroid that took out dinosaurs was 10km across. State of texas is 1200km across. The amount of rock coming at us would be hell of a lot more than 120 times of the 10km one though. Assuming spherical shape for both:

    The formula for volume of the sphere is V = (4/3)πr^3 where r is radius.

    10km across = 5km radius = 523.3km^3
    1200km across = 600km radius = 90 432 000km^3

    That's 1.7 million times more rock than the asteroid that wiped out dinosaurs. Of course the power of the impact also depends on the angle and speed and density but still.. No human will survive this.

  5. #145
    Bloodsail Admiral Dashield28's Avatar
    10+ Year Old Account
    Join Date
    Nov 2010
    Location
    MD, The US of Eh?
    Posts
    1,160
    Quote Originally Posted by MagusUnion View Post
    .... Yeah, they do... You assume that

    A. Planets are held in their orbits with no way to move out of them, like a track line... and
    B. There are outside forces to absorb the energy of the collision, causing the force of the impact to diffuse elsewhere...

    I can easily say that neither of these exist on the scale that we are referring to... so QFT if you haven't had an actual astronomy class (college level or higher) in the last decade...
    How do you account for Theia? It didnt bounce.. Earth's orbit dindt change. It's rotation did.

  6. #146
    Legendary! gherkin's Avatar
    15+ Year Old Account
    Join Date
    Aug 2008
    Location
    Vancouver, BC, Canada
    Posts
    6,002
    Why do americans insist on using States as a unit of measurement? It's not like 80% have any grasp of the scope in the first place.

    R.I.P. YARG

  7. #147
    Blademaster Narsaruzz's Avatar
    15+ Year Old Account
    Join Date
    Jan 2009
    Location
    Denmark, in my Cookie! house
    Posts
    43
    i dont if it have been said before but a meteor the size of texas would proberly hit the earth out of its orbit and thefore make it either crash into the sun of go so close that it would turn to charcoal(spelling?)

  8. #148
    Quote Originally Posted by Dashield28 View Post
    How do you account for Theia? It didnt bounce.. Earth's orbit dindt change. It's rotation did.
    Because the Earth was still mostly molten at the time... that was 4.5 Billion years ago, when the planet was still hot (and by hot, I mean FUCKING hot), so the impact was mostly absorbed by the less dense molten rock on collision. The resulting material that was thrown OUT of the Earth BECAME the Moon because of it...

    You done trolling yet?

  9. #149
    hmm, i suppose we could just put a giant trampoline right under the meteor impact point, would bounce that bad boy right back into space

  10. #150
    Stood in the Fire wicker's Avatar
    10+ Year Old Account
    Join Date
    Jun 2010
    Location
    Alabama
    Posts
    419
    Quote Originally Posted by Gregwar View Post
    I'm sure humanity will wipe itself first
    yup i agree

  11. #151
    Quote Originally Posted by ThePotato View Post
    hmm, i suppose we could just put a giant trampoline right under the meteor impact point, would bounce that bad boy right back into space
    Better yet, let's dig a giant hole through the earth so the asteroid will just pass through.

  12. #152
    Quote Originally Posted by Fraza View Post
    Better yet, let's dig a giant hole through the earth so the asteroid will just pass through.
    Or we could dig out Texas, launch it into space, and replace it with the asteroid.

  13. #153
    Bloodsail Admiral Dashield28's Avatar
    10+ Year Old Account
    Join Date
    Nov 2010
    Location
    MD, The US of Eh?
    Posts
    1,160
    I'm not trolling, I'm providing arguments. Earth's crust is only 6 miles (under oceans) up to 50 miles thick. That is the only solid part of earth. You are telling me that this thin solid surface would be enough to "bounce" an object away? How do you account for the atmospheric shockwave. It has to strike earth.

    What you're saying doesn't make any sense.

    BTW I am not talking about asteroid to asteroid collisions or meteor to meteor collisions, I am talking about texas sized object coming through the atmosphere and crashing into earth.

  14. #154
    Will it destroy the planet? no the planet will still be here but you wouldnt be living to see it, there are alot of things that will happen... the initial impact and resulting shockwave, the boiling of the sea, something that big will more than likley cause all the volcanoes to erupt at the same time,the likes of yellowstone sinking into a sea of magma and the amount of dust that will be in the atmosphere assuming we actualy have one left after the impact would prety much kill everything on the plus side depending on how it hit the planet we might end up with another moon

    And is it just me that keeps being disapointed every time the suposed end of the world dosnt happen?
    Last edited by Lagwin; 2011-02-02 at 09:17 PM.

  15. #155
    Assuming the Asteroid is made of pure iron...

    The density of pure iron is 7.87 g/cm3

    Texas is ~690,000 sq KM.


    Assuming 1cm thick so I can operate on square's...

    690,000 sq KM

    1 square meter = 10,000 sq cm.

    1 square KM = 1,000,000 square meters.

    1 square KM = 10,000,000,000.

    10 billion square CM by 690,000 is

    6,900,000,000,000,000.

    6.9 million billion square CM.

    6.9million billion * 7.8 grams is...

    53,820,000,000,000 KG.

    Since KE = 1/2 mv2

    26,900,000,000,000.


    So, assuming an asteroid is moving at a whopping 1 m/s, it would impact for approximately 26.9 TRILLION Joules.

    Which is approximately the equivalent of 4483.33 Hiroshima bombs.

    Now, according to google, the average speed of an asteroid is 25km per second.

    Which means it would hit the Earth with the equivalent of 112,873,250 Hiroshima bombs.
    112 million.

    And that is an asteroid the size of Texas' surface area (1cm thick).

    So Imagine 112 million Hiroshima bombs hitting the Earth. Think we could really survive that?
    And that is assuming the best case scenario, which is that this asteroid the size of texas is a freakin pancake.
    Last edited by saberon; 2011-02-02 at 10:15 PM.

  16. #156
    Legendary! Collegeguy's Avatar
    10+ Year Old Account
    Join Date
    Jul 2010
    Location
    Antarctica
    Posts
    6,955
    without any doubt it would, but you could see it coming long before it ever hit.
    Last edited by Collegeguy; 2011-02-02 at 10:44 PM.

  17. #157
    All human life would die the Earth would have a pretty bigass dent/hole. The theory about the moon is that earth collided with a mars sized object and eventually the debris clumped together to form the moon and we "absorbed" the rest of it. The initial impact would immediately probably wipe out life on USA then the natural events that would occur would finish the rest. The only safe people would be the ones in space.

  18. #158
    If that actually happened, how early can we see it coming with our own eyes and what would most people be doing in that situation. I wonder if by the time that we start seeing it how much time we have before gg.

  19. #159
    here i was hoping one was on the way right now. Way to disappoint me.

  20. #160
    If you mean destroy the planet, then no. Earth has been hit with similar sized objects in the distant past. If you mean destroy all life on Earth, then yes. Microscopic organisms might survive.

    But the likelihood of being hit by such an object of that size is extremely low, due to the reduced debris within the solar system, the lack of movement and energy, the gravitational pull of larger objects such as Jupiter, etc. Other very large asteroids are entirely possible though, and we have indeed had some very near misses recently.

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •