a force equivalent to 22 atomic bombs.
What kind of murica unit is this?
Also there is a pretty big difference between 22 Davy Crocketts and 22 Tsar Bombas.
a force equivalent to 22 atomic bombs.
What kind of murica unit is this?
Also there is a pretty big difference between 22 Davy Crocketts and 22 Tsar Bombas.
A Davy Crockett is 254 square inch per fahrenheit-crocodiles, so we're obviously talking about an explosion of roughly 76 cubic pound per school shooting.
Are we talking saltwater- or marsh crocodiles here?
Freshwater, obviously. God, did you learn nothing from paying 200k for education?
I thought the Davy Crockett nuclear bazooka was stronger than that.
Comparing high-energy events, especially ones that cause destruction, to weapons that have been used is very common, not just in "murica"
The lack of specificity as to what kind of atomic bomb is silly, though.
Yeah, usually you put it into TNT equivalants. Which in itself isn't useful, but it allows me to look up which order of magnituted of atomic bomb we're talking about. And somebody actually put in the work and it is 22 of the biggest bombs ever. (which ironically are Sovjet, not Murican).
Anyway, It was really just a cheap "Americans don't use metric joke", don't overthink it.
Comparing high-energy events, especially ones that cause destruction, to weapons that have been used is very common, not just in “murica”
can you provide a few examples?
I really need to hear how many football fields can fit on this asteroid before being able to judge its size
Empire State Buldings not doing it for you?
@Kaldo @Bobo @theKalash I would also need to know if those are American football fields or rest of the world ones (ie, soccer). 😉
Simple, ~88,400 hamburgers is too big of a number to reasonably visualize.
That's 150 years away, nobody's going to do shit until 2181, and then the whole world will freak out saying "why hasn't anyone done anything yet!?"
References: climate change, housing collapse in Western countries.
In 120 years, people will likely have a better idea of what the trajectory of Bennu will be. No one currently alive needs to do anything at all about this. This is a science experiment for our lifetimes.
It's still good that they monitor and investigate stuff like this ahead of time. NASA, historically, has allowed for a ton of really cool practical advanced in technology to occur because of research they do on stuff like this, and I think it's entirely worth it to work on this kind of stuff even if we never have to actually shoot it down.
And yet, the article is about how they're doing things already to prepare for the next appropriate action.
I too saw Don't Look Up.
In 150 years industrial society won't even exist anymore. If we're very lucky humans still might be around and the planet doesn't look like Venus, but I wouldn't bet on that
NASA already landed a spacecraft on Bennu and picked a sample. It’s due to arrive on Earth in just three days.
NASA thinks it's a sample of the rock. What if...
Well, enjoy the next three days.
It's a massive turd.
Call them Boeing bombs
Afterwards we discover that Bennu housed an alien species, far more advanced but peaceful isolationists. Well, until we blew their home up.
Good. At least we won't have to worry about retaliation, dead and peaceful means we're double safe.
This guy dark forests.
America 2 needed the space oil.
That'd be on Titan tho, rather than some asteroid
NASA already stole some of their rocks.
160 years ago, NASA already stole some of their rocks. Now, they're back for revenge. Written by Google's Chat-GPT 14 and directed by the MPAA, Midjourney's Bruce Willis stars in the latest Amazon production: Bennu There Done That. Sponsored by McDonald's and available exclusively on Hulu.
You can skip this ad in 186 minutes, or if you'd like to be connected to Emergency Services sooner, consider upgrading to 911+ Premium™️ Instant Plan for only $24 more per week.
Honestly, will probably see some of this in my lifetime.
Unfortunately.
Studies, research findings, and interesting tidbits from the ever-expanding scientific world.
Subcommunities on Beehaw:
Be sure to also check out these other Fediverse science communities:
This community's icon was made by Aaron Schneider, under the CC-BY-NC-SA 4.0 license.