- 47,554
- 102,459
It would probably break up close to reentry and get dozens of impacts instead of just one as well.
Comet Shoemaker–Levy 9 - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Comet Shoemaker–Levy 9 - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
- 1
Shoemaker-Levy broke down during a previous passage, the time spent below Roche limit during an impact event would not be enough.It would probably break up close to reentry and get dozens of impacts instead of just one as well.
Comet Shoemaker–Levy 9 - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Churyumov-Gerasimenko comet is about 5km diameter, which means:Well, it would be roughly 2 trillion Megatons worth of energy (the Tsar Bomba was 50 Megatons). It would no doubt by an ELE and a bad day...preferable to be incinerated at ground zero (before it ever reaches the ground no less) than hang around for all the ejecta and nastiness afterwords.
Shoemaker-Levy broke down during a previous passage, the time spent below Roche limit during an impact event would not be enough.
The Churyumov-Gerasimenko comet is about 5km diameter, which means:
- A 100km-wide crater
- Blast fallout 1000km from impact
- Firestorms: continental level (5000km range)
- No daylight for a couple months (and major destruction of plant life from no photosynthesis, taking a few decades to recover)
- Worldwide acid & toxic rains for about a year
- No ozone layer for a couple years
So, if you were on the same continent (or adjacent continent for seafall), you're fucked, otherwise, you possibly survive with the entire civilization being wiped.
It's enough to get the world tidally locked up, meaning you don't get real tides. Nor sunsets.Assuming the density of this planet is about the same as our own would put it's radius at ~6920 km. The star is 12% of the sun's mass at 7.5 million km. The calculated tidal force proportionally compared to our own would only be a tad over 600x stronger. Surf's up!
It's enough to get the world tidally locked up, meaning you don't get real tides. Nor sunsets.
It's enough to get the world tidally locked up, meaning you don't get real tides. Nor sunsets.
Which is probably the only place where life is possible on that world...Or perpetual sunset if you live in the boundary zone...
Life exists in some crazy places on Earth, I don't think it should be surprising that there might only be certain areas of a planetary body that are inhabited on any given planet or moon by Humans. Its weird to think about, but life on Earth for us is constrained in a massive way compared to the entire surface. Living at the boundary zone would definitely share similarities to living at a high latitude, like in Alaska/Eskimos. Its only weird to someones perception if its not your daily life. If we came across a planet that was a spitting image of Earth, except its only continent was the size of the USA. If that continent was where Antarctica is on Earth that's useless to us for the purpose of a colony as Antarctica is today. Thus, anyone who lived on a planet with 2 stars, or one that did not rotate, or on this boundary zone. That would just be their normal, it wouldn't fuck them up in any appreciable way, and don't think that severely restricts what kind of life might exist necessarily or why that would be a bad thing.
If fucking paradise is found in a 5 mile deep crater on some world why wouldn't we want to necessarily colonize that?
Would love to see a large project to boost a probe to some of these other stars that might have habitable planets.