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Forever Sleep

Earned it we have...
May 4, 2022
11,264
I spotted this yesterday...



The slightlier funnier thing (gallows humour) is how many people in the comment section were happy to let it hit! I wonder just how many people do harbour ideation...

I hope I can be gone by then anyway. Pretty nerve wracking way to go or- not go. Do you suppose a bunch of people will try to figure out the landing area, cordon it off and all the suicidal people will sneak back in?
 
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waistcoat

waistcoat

wow, i have a lot of people to disappoint :o
Aug 10, 2024
254
don't get your hopes up, we have the tech to deflect asteroids lol
there was a test last year( i think? maybe 2 years ago) where nasa managed to deflect an asteroid

we'll be fine, we caught it soon enough
 
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Pluto

Pluto

Cat Extremist
Dec 27, 2020
4,721
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waistcoat

waistcoat

wow, i have a lot of people to disappoint :o
Aug 10, 2024
254
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One day too late

One day too late

Idle mind fills with uneasy thoughts.
Aug 14, 2020
4,245
hi, space nerd here - 2.3% is the literal highest (by SEVERAL orders of magnitude) chance of impact of an asteroid of this size impacting earth ever recorded. also last week it was 1.1ish%, andddd we will only have until April to make measurements before it goes out of our view for a few years.
If 2.3% chance is the highest, then what is 50%?
 
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purelydaft

Member
Apr 5, 2024
36
Last I heard it was "only" a city killer, so not a great asteroid for those of us less enthusiastic about life.
 
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R

Redacted24

Might be Richard Cory... or not
Nov 20, 2023
420
Last I heard it was "only" a city killer, so not a great asteroid for those of us less enthusiastic about life.
Ooh ooh pick my city! I'm too lazy to move to another
 
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quietism

quietism

We make our own wind
Feb 3, 2025
75
According to JPL Sentry, 2024 YR4 has a diameter of 55 metres, and a Torino rating of 3. It'd probably have to land right on top of a city to kill it.

don't get your hopes up, we have the tech to deflect asteroids lol
there was a test last year( i think? maybe 2 years ago) where nasa managed to deflect an asteroid

we'll be fine, we caught it soon enough
The Double Asteroid Redirection Test from 2021-2022? Test run stopping Dimorphos, the satellite of the binary asteroid (65803) Didymos - US$330 million just for a test run - way too much cost involved if you ask me, but it exceeded results. There's a paper about the momentum transfer method here, but I don't think this method would work with all trajectories. In any case YR4 is nothing for us to worry about.

Much more concerning in my opinion is the rapid buildup of orbital debris, especially in low earth orbit. It is only going to get harder and harder to plot safe orbits and launch trajectories. External removal of launch debris remains a diplomatic issue and there are to my knowledge no reliable technical methods. That's also besides the fact it's just about as hard to fund as global warming activism, and telecom providers have a vested interest in compounding the problem.
 
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