Tabloids

The only place for all Non Celestia Discussion/Stuff
Topic author
rthorvald
Posts: 1223
Joined: 20.10.2003
With us: 21 years 1 month
Location: Norway

Tabloids

Post #1by rthorvald » 20.02.2007, 22:29

Well, here??s my rant for the day: two different norwegian newspapers has picked up on the Association of Space Explorers??proposal and now are shouting about an Earth / Aphopis impact in 2036. One, our biggest - and most conservative - paper (Aftenposten) has, as a headline: "Wants the UN to stop asteroid Aphopis", then goes on to say; "NASA fears
Aphopis may crash into the Earth. Astronauts ands scientists calls upon the UN to stop the huge asteroid Aphopis
".

(Not that the ASE proposal isn??t sound. Just that they purposefully mangles it in the paper: instead of discussing what it is about, they just use a snippet to stage a sequel for Bruce Willis). Idiots.

- rthorvald
Image

Avatar
PlutonianEmpire M
Posts: 1374
Joined: 09.09.2004
Age: 40
With us: 20 years 2 months
Location: MinneSNOWta
Contact:

Post #2by PlutonianEmpire » 21.02.2007, 22:53

I say, let it crash. :)
Terraformed Pluto: Now with New Horizons maps! :D

Avatar
Hungry4info
Posts: 1133
Joined: 11.09.2005
With us: 19 years 2 months
Location: Indiana, United States

Post #3by Hungry4info » 22.02.2007, 00:23

I never cease to be amazed as to how much the media stretches things. Reading that short news bit, I envisioned a huge ceres-looking rock crashing into the Earth, shattering it, perhaps making another moon. Also included was, yes, Bruice Willis-type scenarios.
Current Setup:
Windows 7 64 bit. Celestia 1.6.0.
AMD Athlon Processor, 1.6 Ghz, 3 Gb RAM
ATI Radeon HD 3200 Graphics

starfleetengineer
Posts: 41
Joined: 18.01.2007
With us: 17 years 10 months

Post #4by starfleetengineer » 24.02.2007, 01:21

"Once you're in Earth orbit you're half way to almost anywhere in the Universe" - Robert Heinlein

CLICK HERE TO DOWNLOAD THE WARPDRIVE

Avatar
LordFerret M
Posts: 737
Joined: 24.08.2006
Age: 68
With us: 18 years 2 months
Location: NJ USA

Post #5by LordFerret » 24.02.2007, 08:01

In reading this, asteroid deflection comes to my mind.

I recall either reading or watching a tv program about a scientist (from Japan I think) who suggests asteroids could be deflected from their dangerous Earth-impacting orbits by the use of "microgravity". The idea being to launch a probe which catches up and follows along with the asteroid at very close distance... and because of the mass of the two objects and the microgravity which would exist, they would each tug at each other and pull closer together... both objects moving in the process... which at some point, the probe would move its position again a bit farther away... the process repeats, and eventually the asteroid would be deflected from its course.

If I run across this again I will post a link if one is available, it was quite interesting.


Return to “Petit Bistro Entropy”