Pat
Pat
It might be better to do a dress rehearsal when the odds of impact are
1 to 250,000 than to do it at a later time for another asteroid when we
have odds of impact to be 250,000 to 1.
Alain Fournier
It has been estimated that there will be around 10 billion people
living on the earth by the year 2030.
If the Russians are that serious about getting funding for this
operation, just go ahead “CAN THE EARTH” because ALGORE says it’ll be
too late anyway, and while we wait for results from the Kepler survey
to come in, go full bore interstellar while we’ve still got the time
to develop the technology.
- better yet, just mine the damn thing while it swings in close enough
for the job.
American
This is not an endorsement of HR3962 or any reasonable facsimile
thereof, for either now or any time within the next 20 years.
"closer than some geo-stationary satellites" ?
Geo-stationary satellites operate at varying distances?
Sylvia.
> Comrade C. Little is in fine capitalist form, considering the odds of it
> impacting are presently 1 in 250,000.
So they got something that ain't broke and they're gonna fix it.
It's a good thing the Russians have never had a failure in space otherwise
I'd worry they could make the odds more like 1 in 2.5. Sounds like a
dangerous experiment - oh no our foreign partners meant feet/sec!!! Saturday
Night Live could have a field day with this. Might be better to invest in a
cure for an imaginary plague that isn't going to happen, or feeding the
starving population of a country that doesn't exist.
The Russians plan to move it so it impacts the United States...Nuke em
now!
The Russians plan to move it so it impacts the United States...Nuke em
now!
Make a nice plot for a new James Bond novel. All we need is a catchy title
(From Russia with Love has already been used unfortunately) and the name of
the female lead - something like Heaven Lee Body.
The article said if it hits, it'll turn all of France into a desert.
So shouldn't we try moving into it's path?
Better idea, put it into an orbit that has it just a bit before or
after the earth in the same orbit. That way, its relative velocity is
very low and we can use it for material for making stuff in space.
See one of my old posts concerning solar thermal evaporation of
asteroidal materials to refine materials and to form the vapor
deposited materialonto substrates as foils.
That would require large change in its orbit. How would that be achieved?
Sylvia.
> So they got something that ain't broke and they're gonna fix it.
It's just another vaporware Russian space project that won't get built,
although given the perversity of the universe, I could picture them
deflecting it in such a way that it then _would_ hit Earth. :-)
Pat
> That would require large change in its orbit. How would that be achieved?
Enlightened and dedicated socialist endeavor by The New Soviet Man?
No, I guess that's out.
Hiring the Chinese to do it?
Aye lassie, that's the ticket. :-D
Pat
I want em to nuke it.
This could be a screw up with translation, as Russia has used satellites
with highly elliptical orbits (Molniya orbits) that also have a 24 hour
period.
You mean, scatter its component parts (it's probably a rubble pile) so
as to guarantee that a fair number will hit Earth?
Sylvia.
Indeed, the miss could be converted into a hit the next time around
by the scattered parts.
And it could to an excuse to do a bit of very above ground nuclear
bomb testing. That sounds much more Putin than saving the planet.
Were they...*evil* stamps? (Twirls handlebar mustache.)
Now Rusty has dissed the Ruskies in a updated article about Apophis:
http://www.wired.com/dangerroom/2009/12/russia-plans-to-save-planet-from-killer-asteroid-no-nuclear-explosions-space-chief-promises/#more-21127
The Schweickarmeister says that Perminov is puffing on a Cuban cigar and
blowing smoke up our assteroids.
Pat
I actually picture Dr. Evil asking that with his little finger to his
mouth...