[OC] I built an impact simulator for my university thesis. Here is the estimated casualty blueprint worldwide and per country if the dinosaur-killing Chicxulub asteroid (17.5 km) hit Europe today.
[OC] I built an impact simulator for my university thesis. Here is the estimated casualty blueprint worldwide and per country if the dinosaur-killing Chicxulub asteroid (17.5 km) hit Europe today.
Yeah Chicxulub was a near-total eradication of life on Earth. Almost 80% of species were totally wiped out, but the survivors weren’t doing well either. Over 99.9% of all organisms were killed. It took tens of millions of years for the biosphere to recover; multiple times the age of our entire species
kielu on
What does it take into account and what not? Land/water? Elevation? Geological composition? Angle? Velocity? Etc
arawnsd on
Very cool. Reminds me of the nuclear bomb impact simulators that used to be online. Probably still are! A very macabre and interesting thing to play with. Thanks for sharing!
Exatex on
does it take climate change into account? Because that’s what gets you, surviving the impact itself is kind of the easy part
iolmao on
That looks bad for the economy, should we work from home in case? /s
fastinserter on
The lucky ones would be those shown in the red area
AsleepNinja on
So I’m assuming this doesn’t take into account topology, mountains, or the geology of what the asteroid hit?
wingchild on
Improper spacing between Extinction and (Chicxulub, -2pts
13 Comments
I’m guessing this is only taking into account the impact itself, and not the aftereffects like reduced crop viability from the sun being blocked?
so the red is “what gets destroyed right away or so”?
I would love to see the other tabs: crater, overpressure, etc…
Where’s the link? Looks like a fun thing to play with when I am bored at work 😄
Have you quantified the effect of impact angle?
You may find the app in [https://eneo.metal.ntua.gr/](https://eneo.metal.ntua.gr/)
Yeah Chicxulub was a near-total eradication of life on Earth. Almost 80% of species were totally wiped out, but the survivors weren’t doing well either. Over 99.9% of all organisms were killed. It took tens of millions of years for the biosphere to recover; multiple times the age of our entire species
What does it take into account and what not? Land/water? Elevation? Geological composition? Angle? Velocity? Etc
Very cool. Reminds me of the nuclear bomb impact simulators that used to be online. Probably still are! A very macabre and interesting thing to play with. Thanks for sharing!
does it take climate change into account? Because that’s what gets you, surviving the impact itself is kind of the easy part
That looks bad for the economy, should we work from home in case? /s
The lucky ones would be those shown in the red area
So I’m assuming this doesn’t take into account topology, mountains, or the geology of what the asteroid hit?
Improper spacing between Extinction and (Chicxulub, -2pts
Lovely site though