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On 10/03/2025 11:52 pm, Carlos E.R. wrote:There is evidence of dangerous "objects" hitting the earth and causing destruction in the "historic" age.On 2025-03-06 17:44, Bill Sloman wrote:And that means that you don't know what you are talking about.On 6/03/2025 10:54 pm, Carlos E.R. wrote:>On 2025-03-06 04:06, Bill Sloman wrote:>On 6/03/2025 1:45 pm, Carlos E.R. wrote:>On 2025-03-06 03:05, Bill Sloman wrote:On 6/03/2025 8:28 am, Dave Platt wrote:>In article <vq8jtq$299g5$1@dont-email.me>,
Bill Sloman <bill.sloman@ieee.org> wrote:
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>>>>Do you really expect that any nation can do such a thing, and not have it>
detected and traced back to the nation in question? Outer space is
a lot more "visible" than something like the Manhattan Project was.
But there is a lot of it, and most of the action would be happening a long way away from the earth - more than 93 million miles, on average.
Russell's teapot :-p :-)
Not exactly. My claim was simply that observation would be difficult - not impossible - in the same way that it isn't impossible to intercept an intercontinetal ballasitc missile in mid-flight, but that the practical difficulties mean that nobody is trying to do it.
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Reagan's "Star Wars" proposal pretended that it was practical.
The thing is, it is impossible to prove that there are no objects out there in an intercept orbit with earth.
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If you find one, you have proved it exists, but you can not prove the negative.
And you'd be mad to try. Meteorites hit the earth every day, so there are clearly lots of small objects out there with intercept orbits with earth.
Obviously I refer to objects of a dangerous size.
There's a whole distribution of space junk up there. The bigger they are, the more damage they can do when they hit the surface of the earth.
The historical record - in terms of meteor craters big enough to have survived for a few million years - demonstrates that big earth grazing asteroids are pretty rare. I imagine that somebody has worked out what the distribution is, at least roughly.
https://www.researchgate.net/ publication/278734323_The_Compositional_Structure_of_the_Asteroid_Belt/ figures?lo=1--
There doesn't seem to be any reason to imagine that the distribution isn't smooth and monotonic.
A really small meteor - one only just big enough to make it the surface of the earth - could still kill you if it hit your head.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tunguska_event
may have killed three people, but it did knock down a lot of trees.
It seems to have been a stony asteroid, rather than a lump of nickel- iron, and seems to have come apart at an altitude of of between five and ten kilometres.
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