Why are redditors so weird about wanting people to die from asteroid strikes?
Catchphrase1228 on
It’s the bugs again!
Da_Spooky_Ghost on
School bus sized asteroid, so would not have ended the world to the dismay of Redditor’s comments here.
Missed us by 57,000 miles, sounds like a lot but that’s 1/4 the distance the moon is from Earth.
AdjNounNumbers on
You win this round, Inyalowda!
Sirgolfs on
Epstein files came real close too.
butcher99 on
A meteor about 20 metres across exploded over Russia at ~30 km altitude
Released energy equivalent to about 30 Hiroshima bombs
The shockwave blew out windows across a wide area, injuring around 1,500 people — mostly from flying glass
No crater, nothing hit the ground
So not completely harmless
Substantial_Milk8170 on
The fact that we only discovered it ‘days ago’ is way more terrifying than the actual near-miss.
orangelity on
Am I to understand that our entire planet’s radar capabilities to provide us with radar information on these types of objects were dependent on only one telescope (which collapsed 6 years ago) and one antenna (which is currently down for extended maintenance)?
daHaus on
Been quite a few of those the past few days
RandomPantsAppear on
Getting hit by an asteroid feels like it would fit right in with the 2020s itinerary.
Bohottie on
Goddamn, the “please hit us” “jokes” are old at this point.
Bikewer on
Many years ago, during the height of the Cold War, Arthur C. Clarke cautioned that an asteroid impact on or near a large city might be interpreted as a nuclear strike and precipitate WWIII.
At the time, both the US and the USSR were on a “launch on detection” status and Clarke figured there would simply not be time to analyze the impact.
I believe our observation capabilities are more advanced now, but it’s still worrisome.
BASEDBEARDGOD on
Everybody lean.
rPoliticsModsBlowMe on
Giant asteroid 2028
ProperSauce on
Damn, almost.
NetFu on
Makes you wonder how many times this has happened in the past and we never even noticed.
albertech842 on
The aliens sure like to make their pitches
MyNameIsCaulfield on
“An object at least 10 times bigger than 2026JH2, called Apophis, will pass much closer to Earth, at a projected 32,000 kilometers (19,883 miles), on April 13, 2029”
Yikes?
juanlee337 on
bus size? so it would have disintegrated during entry?
Kflynn1337 on
Not enough to destroy the Earth, but if that hit it’d be enough to wipe out a fair chunk of a city.
Pretty good argument for NASA funding new telescopes.
SVAndrei on
What a shame. Maybe we’ll have better luck next time.
Dense-Muffin-3809 on
It’s quite funny and to think that we are truly one asteroid away to be completely destroyed. Millions of years , and we still remain pretty lucky.
Thin-Discipline1673 on
Well Ebola it is then. Couldn’t have a quick death, oh no gotta have blood spurting out all my orifices. Fuckin hell!
AlwaysUpvotesScience on
I think “narrowly” is used appropriately here. 56,913 miles is nothing.
Jebediah_Johnson on
That’s 7.2 earths away. That’s close as fuck in astronomical terms.
Remcin on
My biggest takeaway from these stories is that we still have no real control over our planetary fate. If the universal dice roll against us, we’re not going to stop it. Best we can do is a Greenland (2020) situation and hope some of us ride it out in a hole somewhere.
Rynowash on
I feel like an asteroid to the chin would be a perfect upgrade from the current state of things. Send it.
DopBopDeeBeep on
The Chelyabinsk meteor over Russia was ~20 meters, bit bigger than this, and it still didn’t reach the ground intact.
noots-to-you on
I’m calmed by the idea that we may all be killed by an asteroid with like an hour of warning.
jacksbox on
Would’ve made a great series finale after a fuckin weird final few seasons
31 Comments
Aaaaaw
Why are redditors so weird about wanting people to die from asteroid strikes?
It’s the bugs again!
School bus sized asteroid, so would not have ended the world to the dismay of Redditor’s comments here.
Missed us by 57,000 miles, sounds like a lot but that’s 1/4 the distance the moon is from Earth.
You win this round, Inyalowda!
Epstein files came real close too.
A meteor about 20 metres across exploded over Russia at ~30 km altitude
Released energy equivalent to about 30 Hiroshima bombs
The shockwave blew out windows across a wide area, injuring around 1,500 people — mostly from flying glass
No crater, nothing hit the ground
So not completely harmless
The fact that we only discovered it ‘days ago’ is way more terrifying than the actual near-miss.
Am I to understand that our entire planet’s radar capabilities to provide us with radar information on these types of objects were dependent on only one telescope (which collapsed 6 years ago) and one antenna (which is currently down for extended maintenance)?
Been quite a few of those the past few days
Getting hit by an asteroid feels like it would fit right in with the 2020s itinerary.
Goddamn, the “please hit us” “jokes” are old at this point.
Many years ago, during the height of the Cold War, Arthur C. Clarke cautioned that an asteroid impact on or near a large city might be interpreted as a nuclear strike and precipitate WWIII.
At the time, both the US and the USSR were on a “launch on detection” status and Clarke figured there would simply not be time to analyze the impact.
I believe our observation capabilities are more advanced now, but it’s still worrisome.
Everybody lean.
Giant asteroid 2028
Damn, almost.
Makes you wonder how many times this has happened in the past and we never even noticed.
The aliens sure like to make their pitches
“An object at least 10 times bigger than 2026JH2, called Apophis, will pass much closer to Earth, at a projected 32,000 kilometers (19,883 miles), on April 13, 2029”
Yikes?
bus size? so it would have disintegrated during entry?
Not enough to destroy the Earth, but if that hit it’d be enough to wipe out a fair chunk of a city.
Pretty good argument for NASA funding new telescopes.
What a shame. Maybe we’ll have better luck next time.
It’s quite funny and to think that we are truly one asteroid away to be completely destroyed. Millions of years , and we still remain pretty lucky.
Well Ebola it is then. Couldn’t have a quick death, oh no gotta have blood spurting out all my orifices. Fuckin hell!
I think “narrowly” is used appropriately here. 56,913 miles is nothing.
That’s 7.2 earths away. That’s close as fuck in astronomical terms.
My biggest takeaway from these stories is that we still have no real control over our planetary fate. If the universal dice roll against us, we’re not going to stop it. Best we can do is a Greenland (2020) situation and hope some of us ride it out in a hole somewhere.
I feel like an asteroid to the chin would be a perfect upgrade from the current state of things. Send it.
The Chelyabinsk meteor over Russia was ~20 meters, bit bigger than this, and it still didn’t reach the ground intact.
I’m calmed by the idea that we may all be killed by an asteroid with like an hour of warning.
Would’ve made a great series finale after a fuckin weird final few seasons