How big of a nuclear explosin would it take to knock the earth out of orbit? or would the earth just crumble? or could we explode a big nuke on one side of the earth and slow its rotation?
these questions trouble me.
these questions trouble me.
Last edited by Spark (2009-04-05 23:36:25)
anti-matter reaction?AussieReaper wrote:
You couldn't do it with a nuclear reaction.
Different kind of reaction afaik. Not an explosion.destruktion_6143 wrote:
anti-matter reaction?AussieReaper wrote:
You couldn't do it with a nuclear reaction.
Well to shift the orbit of a planet you would need a lot of mass removed. If we could repeatedly hit the moon with nuclear explosions it would be possible, but only because the moon is believed to be very porous would we have a chance of taking a chunk of it out. And then how that effects the Earth's orbit depends on a lot of factors.destruktion_6143 wrote:
anti-matter reaction?AussieReaper wrote:
You couldn't do it with a nuclear reaction.
AussieReaper wrote:
You couldn't do it with a nuclear reaction.
don't be so negative. come guys, let's put our heads together and make this work.AussieReaper wrote:
Well to shift the orbit of a planet you would need a lot of mass removed. If we could repeatedly hit the moon with nuclear explosions it would be possible, but only because the moon is believed to be very porous would we have a chance of taking a chunk of it out. And then how that effects the Earth's orbit depends on a lot of factors.
Sending an asteroid towards Earth is hit and miss also, thanks to Jupiter and the moon giving us some protection. And the Earth survived one already (although the dinosaurs did not).
Reciprocity wrote:
don't be so negative. come guys, let's put our heads together and make this work.AussieReaper wrote:
Well to shift the orbit of a planet you would need a lot of mass removed. If we could repeatedly hit the moon with nuclear explosions it would be possible, but only because the moon is believed to be very porous would we have a chance of taking a chunk of it out. And then how that effects the Earth's orbit depends on a lot of factors.
Sending an asteroid towards Earth is hit and miss also, thanks to Jupiter and the moon giving us some protection. And the Earth survived one already (although the dinosaurs did not).
YEAH! if we can put a man on the moon, we can do anything!Reciprocity wrote:
don't be so negative. come guys, let's put our heads together and make this work.AussieReaper wrote:
Well to shift the orbit of a planet you would need a lot of mass removed. If we could repeatedly hit the moon with nuclear explosions it would be possible, but only because the moon is believed to be very porous would we have a chance of taking a chunk of it out. And then how that effects the Earth's orbit depends on a lot of factors.
Sending an asteroid towards Earth is hit and miss also, thanks to Jupiter and the moon giving us some protection. And the Earth survived one already (although the dinosaurs did not).
Yes, but considering that we've gone an amazing 1/3rd through it at the best of times, it's not exactly paltry either.Man With No Name wrote:
isnt the crust of the earth like an egg shell compared to the rest of the layers?
dw guys, i got thisSpark wrote:
Yes, but considering that we've gone an amazing 1/3rd through it at the best of times, it's not exactly paltry either.Man With No Name wrote:
isnt the crust of the earth like an egg shell compared to the rest of the layers?
Flecco wrote:
dw guys, i got thisSpark wrote:
Yes, but considering that we've gone an amazing 1/3rd through it at the best of times, it's not exactly paltry either.Man With No Name wrote:
isnt the crust of the earth like an egg shell compared to the rest of the layers?
dw guys, i got thisPureFodder wrote:
A quick calculation (possibly a bit wrong but anyway) of the gravitational force that the sun exherts on the earth gives a value of 35,000,000,000,000,000,000,000 Newtons.
It's going to take a hell of a lot to overcome that force.
If every fat person jumped at the same time..Pug wrote:
You don't need a nuke.
If every Chinese man, woman and child stood on a chair and jumped off at exactly the same time....
I never heard that. Ive actually heard that we havent gone that far into the earth. school meSpark wrote:
Yes, but considering that we've gone an amazing 1/3rd through it at the best of times, it's not exactly paltry either.Man With No Name wrote:
isnt the crust of the earth like an egg shell compared to the rest of the layers?
Drilling 1/3 into the Earth can't be real, from a little googling it seems the deepest we've ever drilled is about 12KmMan With No Name wrote:
I never heard that. Ive actually heard that we havent gone that far into the earth. school meSpark wrote:
Yes, but considering that we've gone an amazing 1/3rd through it at the best of times, it's not exactly paltry either.Man With No Name wrote:
isnt the crust of the earth like an egg shell compared to the rest of the layers?
Last edited by Mekstizzle (2009-04-06 09:09:38)