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Asteroid passes just 8,700miles from Earth
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Part of the devastation in Tunguska, Siberia, in 1908 after a meteorite struck. The impact created a blast so powerful it leveled 1,200 square miles of forest http://i.dailymail.co.uk/i/pix/2009/...60_468x450.jpg Holy crap! |
A miss is as good as a mile. :sweat:
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My question is, what happens if something of that size hits the moon? No atmosphere to burn it up, much smaller mass to have to absorb the impact... though I guess the gigantic craters prove that it's not going to knock the thing off course or anything.
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Alien probe, making a low-altitude overflight. Back on Gzyx X-11, the cephalopods are waving their tentacles in delight as they see positive proof that the Earth has plenty of liquid water, and no apparent signs of intelligent life.
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And there's a very fresh-looking crater just about there, too, big enough that the fireworks would have been naked-eye visible. They think that might be the one. A bit of asking around on an astronomy board like Bad Astronomy/BAUD might yield some idea of the meteoroid's size. |
I've heard of the same events. I've also read that the moon is still reverberating from various impacts.
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The moon does resonate from sufficient impact. It's because it's solid to the core and has been for about the last 3 billion years. Entropy, however, damps the resonating in due course. Earth, with a core that is partly liquid and the most of that iron, damps the ringing much quicker.
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