I put the speed as high as it would go with a 90 degree and 45 degree impacts. The location was 5000km away from impact, but I'd expect a blast of over a trillion times the power of an average atomic bomb to level pretty much everything on earth. Instead this thing told me that there were places where the pressure would go unnoticed and the noise would be at about the level of highway traffic.Kmar wrote:
hmm, how fast? Here is the math for those more gifted than me. http://www.purdue.edu/impactearth/Conte … tation.pdfmcgid1 wrote:
For those interested, there's going to be a total lunar eclipse on Monday night. Best viewing in the US will be around 1:15am eastern.
http://news.yahoo.com/s/space/20101217/ … ondaynight
Edit:I think this thing is broken. I put in a strike on land by a 10km wide asteroid made of solid depleted uranium and it said there would be survivable areas.Kmar wrote:
YES! .. great success.
http://i.imgur.com/D8kJ3.jpg
If ur bored http://www.purdue.edu/impactearth
A new website lets astronomers - and anyone who likes to watch stuff blow up - calculate the damage a comet or asteroid would cause if it hit Earth.
The interactive website, called Impact: Earth! (available at www.purdue.edu/impactearth), is scientifically accurate enough to be used by the Department of Homeland Security and NASA, but user-friendly enough for elementary school students, according to the researchers who developed it.
Last edited by mcgid1 (2010-12-18 21:57:23)