ryanosaur Audioholic Overlord Sep 26, 2022 #2 Been paying attention to this... curious to find out if they managed to affect the rock much more than just crashing a "vending machine" into it. Still pretty flippin' cool.
Been paying attention to this... curious to find out if they managed to affect the rock much more than just crashing a "vending machine" into it. Still pretty flippin' cool.
j_garcia Audioholic Jedi Sep 26, 2022 #3 Yeah, my thoughts exactly, besides knowing they can hit one now, what kind of data did they get from it?
Yeah, my thoughts exactly, besides knowing they can hit one now, what kind of data did they get from it?
TLS Guy Seriously, I have no life. Sep 26, 2022 #4 j_garcia said: Yeah, my thoughts exactly, besides knowing they can hit one now, what kind of data did they get from it? Click to expand... The data will come in the days and weeks ahead, when it will be determined if the crash has affected the orbit io Dimorphos, and by how much. Dr. Paul Abell is the son of Drs. Bob and Mattie Abell, who were colleagues of mine in my time in Manitoba. They came out from Huddersfield UK, and now make their home in White Rock BC. Dr. Paul Abell is a graduate of the John Odegaard School of Aerospace Science at the University of ND, Grand Forks ND. He heads up the Asteroid program at NASA. The object is to develop a plan to alter the trajectory of an asteroid threatening Earth.
j_garcia said: Yeah, my thoughts exactly, besides knowing they can hit one now, what kind of data did they get from it? Click to expand... The data will come in the days and weeks ahead, when it will be determined if the crash has affected the orbit io Dimorphos, and by how much. Dr. Paul Abell is the son of Drs. Bob and Mattie Abell, who were colleagues of mine in my time in Manitoba. They came out from Huddersfield UK, and now make their home in White Rock BC. Dr. Paul Abell is a graduate of the John Odegaard School of Aerospace Science at the University of ND, Grand Forks ND. He heads up the Asteroid program at NASA. The object is to develop a plan to alter the trajectory of an asteroid threatening Earth.
j_garcia Audioholic Jedi Sep 27, 2022 #5 I guess if they hit it pretty far out, it wouldn't take much of a change to direct it out of a harmful path. It seems a bit mild of a plan to just throw very expensive stuff at asteroids. Maybe we can send a Tesla next time. https://www.cnn.com/2022/02/08/tech/spacex-tesla-roadster-falcon-heavy-anniversary-scn/index.html
I guess if they hit it pretty far out, it wouldn't take much of a change to direct it out of a harmful path. It seems a bit mild of a plan to just throw very expensive stuff at asteroids. Maybe we can send a Tesla next time. https://www.cnn.com/2022/02/08/tech/spacex-tesla-roadster-falcon-heavy-anniversary-scn/index.html
TLS Guy Seriously, I have no life. Sep 27, 2022 #6 j_garcia said: I guess if they hit it pretty far out, it wouldn't take much of a change to direct it out of a harmful path. It seems a bit mild of a plan to just throw very expensive stuff at asteroids. Maybe we can send a Tesla next time. https://www.cnn.com/2022/02/08/tech/spacex-tesla-roadster-falcon-heavy-anniversary-scn/index.html Click to expand... Dart weighted 363 Kg, (800 lb.) and crashed into Dimorphos at 22,500 kph (14,000mph). That gives it a momentum of 5000 SI. (5000 kg.m/sec). That is a lot of momentum.
j_garcia said: I guess if they hit it pretty far out, it wouldn't take much of a change to direct it out of a harmful path. It seems a bit mild of a plan to just throw very expensive stuff at asteroids. Maybe we can send a Tesla next time. https://www.cnn.com/2022/02/08/tech/spacex-tesla-roadster-falcon-heavy-anniversary-scn/index.html Click to expand... Dart weighted 363 Kg, (800 lb.) and crashed into Dimorphos at 22,500 kph (14,000mph). That gives it a momentum of 5000 SI. (5000 kg.m/sec). That is a lot of momentum.
j_garcia Audioholic Jedi Sep 27, 2022 #7 How much do they estimate the asteroid weighted though? There's no telling, it could be dense or light. We will see in the coming days how much its trajectory was altered.
How much do they estimate the asteroid weighted though? There's no telling, it could be dense or light. We will see in the coming days how much its trajectory was altered.
TLS Guy Seriously, I have no life. Sep 27, 2022 #8 j_garcia said: How much do they estimate the asteroid weighted though? There's no telling, it could be dense or light. We will see in the coming days how much its trajectory was altered. Click to expand... We will know that by how much the trajectory is altered. The weight of Dimorphos is anybody's guess. That is the whole point of the experiment. Since the momentum of the space craft is known, the weight of Dimorphos can be calculated, unless it is so heavy the impact does not alter its orbit enough to be observed.
j_garcia said: How much do they estimate the asteroid weighted though? There's no telling, it could be dense or light. We will see in the coming days how much its trajectory was altered. Click to expand... We will know that by how much the trajectory is altered. The weight of Dimorphos is anybody's guess. That is the whole point of the experiment. Since the momentum of the space craft is known, the weight of Dimorphos can be calculated, unless it is so heavy the impact does not alter its orbit enough to be observed.
lovinthehd Audioholic Jedi Sep 27, 2022 #9 Then we'll have to shoot a nuke at one if it doesn't change it much. Think it might be time for a rewatch of Armageddon
Then we'll have to shoot a nuke at one if it doesn't change it much. Think it might be time for a rewatch of Armageddon
D Dude#1279435 Audioholic Spartan Sep 27, 2022 #10 lovinthehd said: Then we'll have to shoot a nuke at one if it doesn't change it much. Think it might be time for a rewatch of Armageddon Click to expand... Please no. I'd rather walk into an electric fence first.
lovinthehd said: Then we'll have to shoot a nuke at one if it doesn't change it much. Think it might be time for a rewatch of Armageddon Click to expand... Please no. I'd rather walk into an electric fence first.
panteragstk Audioholic Warlord Sep 27, 2022 #11 Dude#1279435 said: Please no. I'd rather walk into an electric fence first. Click to expand...
highfigh Seriously, I have no life. Sep 27, 2022 #12 ryanosaur said: Been paying attention to this... curious to find out if they managed to affect the rock much more than just crashing a "vending machine" into it. Still pretty flippin' cool. Click to expand... At 14K MPH and weighing 1300 pounds, the Kinetic Energy would be >45 billion Joules and that's a lot of energy. At a distance of 100 million miles from Earth, it would be able to cause its path to deviate enough to miss.
ryanosaur said: Been paying attention to this... curious to find out if they managed to affect the rock much more than just crashing a "vending machine" into it. Still pretty flippin' cool. Click to expand... At 14K MPH and weighing 1300 pounds, the Kinetic Energy would be >45 billion Joules and that's a lot of energy. At a distance of 100 million miles from Earth, it would be able to cause its path to deviate enough to miss.
R rnatalli Audioholic Ninja Sep 27, 2022 #13 Watched this live yesterday; really cool! Here's hoping it actually worked.
j_garcia Audioholic Jedi Sep 27, 2022 #14 This pair of asteroids were not a threat was my understanding. This was just a test to see if they could do it rather than wait to figure out if it works on something that is actually dangerous.
This pair of asteroids were not a threat was my understanding. This was just a test to see if they could do it rather than wait to figure out if it works on something that is actually dangerous.
ryanosaur Audioholic Overlord Sep 27, 2022 #15 j_garcia said: This pair of asteroids were not a threat was my understanding. This was just a test to see if they could do it rather than wait to figure out if it works on something that is actually dangerous. Click to expand... correct.
j_garcia said: This pair of asteroids were not a threat was my understanding. This was just a test to see if they could do it rather than wait to figure out if it works on something that is actually dangerous. Click to expand... correct.
j_garcia Audioholic Jedi Sep 27, 2022 #16 Post impact, taken from the companion craft. Dimorphos on the left with the ejected material from the impact.
Post impact, taken from the companion craft. Dimorphos on the left with the ejected material from the impact.
panteragstk Audioholic Warlord Sep 27, 2022 #17 j_garcia said: This pair of asteroids were not a threat was my understanding. This was just a test to see if they could do it rather than wait to figure out if it works on something that is actually dangerous. Click to expand... As they should. God forbid we have to send a bunch of rough necks to an asteroid to drill on it or something stupid like that. I love that NASA shows that movie to newbies and ask them how many things were wrong with the movie. Hilarious.
j_garcia said: This pair of asteroids were not a threat was my understanding. This was just a test to see if they could do it rather than wait to figure out if it works on something that is actually dangerous. Click to expand... As they should. God forbid we have to send a bunch of rough necks to an asteroid to drill on it or something stupid like that. I love that NASA shows that movie to newbies and ask them how many things were wrong with the movie. Hilarious.
j_garcia Audioholic Jedi Sep 27, 2022 #18 Video of impact. https://i.kinja-img.com/gawker-media/image/upload/c_scale,fl_progressive,q_80,w_800/02a611e7cad55df01dbb37ec31d9f558.mp4 Looks like DART kept going.
Video of impact. https://i.kinja-img.com/gawker-media/image/upload/c_scale,fl_progressive,q_80,w_800/02a611e7cad55df01dbb37ec31d9f558.mp4 Looks like DART kept going.
lovinthehd Audioholic Jedi Sep 27, 2022 #19 j_garcia said: Post impact, taken from the companion craft. Dimorphos on the left with the ejected material from the impact. Click to expand... Was wondering about whether there was a separate craft taking pics....does kinda look like something kept going....was more assuming it was the asteroid, tho?
j_garcia said: Post impact, taken from the companion craft. Dimorphos on the left with the ejected material from the impact. Click to expand... Was wondering about whether there was a separate craft taking pics....does kinda look like something kept going....was more assuming it was the asteroid, tho?
j_garcia Audioholic Jedi Sep 27, 2022 #20 lovinthehd said: Was wondering about whether there was a separate craft taking pics....does kinda look like something kept going....was more assuming it was the asteroid, tho? Click to expand... It will take 2 yrs for the next set of satellites to get there to do an actual investigation of the asteroid. To me it almost looks like it passed through it, or at least debris passed through. DART apparently dropped a little camera satellite once it got close and that captured some shots, but they didn't want it too close because it might get damaged by debris. They are still analyzing the images from that second satellite. The video is from a telescope.
lovinthehd said: Was wondering about whether there was a separate craft taking pics....does kinda look like something kept going....was more assuming it was the asteroid, tho? Click to expand... It will take 2 yrs for the next set of satellites to get there to do an actual investigation of the asteroid. To me it almost looks like it passed through it, or at least debris passed through. DART apparently dropped a little camera satellite once it got close and that captured some shots, but they didn't want it too close because it might get damaged by debris. They are still analyzing the images from that second satellite. The video is from a telescope.