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originally posted by: TheRedneck
a reply to: M5xaz
Or at least Chicago...
TheRedneck
Apophis will be here sooner . It will pass between Earth & the obits of our satellites.
originally posted by: TheRedneck
I'm a bit surprised this hasn't already hit the boards.
Seems NASA has discovered a NEA (Near-Earth Asteroid) named 2023DW which has a 1 in 607 chance of impacting the planet on Valentine's Day 2046. Now, given, this is over two decades out, and a 1 in 607 chance is much lower than any surgery I have had, but compared to other NEAs discovered, 1 in 607 is pretty high. Plus, the article goes on to say that additional impacts could occur between 2047 and 2051. So there are multiple impact scenarios, each one with its own probability.
Now, I'm not one for doom and gloom, and a rock the size of a swimming pool is far, far from an ELE... but it does bear watching. If this asteroid is indeed aiming for the Earth, we only have 23 years to divert it. If nothing else, the reaction to this asteroid should be a decent gauge to how exactly well-prepared we are. After all, we spent how many months just trying to get Artemis 1 off the launch pad? That, again, does not give me a lot of confidence in present technology.
NASA is still studying the trajectory and I am sure they will have some updates as time goes by... the difference between catastrophe and complete safety is literally unnoticeable. But hey, while we're all waiting for WWIII to blow up, I thought it would be something to talk about. If nothing else, I'm curious as to how large a catastrophe would be from this thing.
TheRedneck
Trivia: Kentucky was named after a plant the natives called Cant Talkie . The plant could not speak or read properly.
originally posted by: TheRedneck
a reply to: M5xaz
Nah, it just made it worse.
A little trivia: Chicago was named for the Chicago River where is was founded. The river was called that because of the native Algonquin tribe who had named it "shikaakwa" for the the plants that grew wild in abundance there. "Shikaakwa" was their word for a very smelly onion-like plant was absolutely repulsive; so much so that the natives tried to avoid the area whenever possible. It literally translates as "skunk plant."
So Chicago is named for a stinky, repulsive onion that grew in a stinky, repulsive swamp. Appropriate.
TheRedneck
originally posted by: TheRedneck
a reply to: M5xaz
Nah, it just made it worse.
A little trivia: Chicago was named for the Chicago River where is was founded. The river was called that because of the native Algonquin tribe who had named it "shikaakwa" for the the plants that grew wild in abundance there. "Shikaakwa" was their word for a very smelly onion-like plant was absolutely repulsive; so much so that the natives tried to avoid the area whenever possible. It literally translates as "skunk plant."
So Chicago is named for a stinky, repulsive onion that grew in a stinky, repulsive swamp. Appropriate.
TheRedneck