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Originally posted by FinalCountdown
So are you saying that the parameter resets to zero on the Altitude chart?
Or is the X axis going to make its full 75 degree paradigm shift…
Mmmmm…
This could also mean that the vector is off by a few degrees, so scratch that last thought.
Originally posted by Trillium
Originally posted by FinalCountdown
So are you saying that the parameter resets to zero on the Altitude chart?
Or is the X axis going to make its full 75 degree paradigm shift…
Mmmmm…
This could also mean that the vector is off by a few degrees, so scratch that last thought.
It more like if X meat Y you gone get a big SHTF Z
remember X * Y = Z
Originally posted by FinalCountdown
Actually, come to think of it, the chart clearly shows that the vector stays on a true 45
Would that mean what I think it means???
Oh s##t this is not good. Am I reading this wrong?
Originally posted by NewThor7
I made a video about this exact subject.
www.youtube.com...
And I think the problem is that when space rocks bump into other space rocks
they bump into more space rocks. So no JPL orbital will ever be 100% accurate always.
Originally posted by ngchunter
Originally posted by NewThor7
I made a video about this exact subject.
www.youtube.com...
And I think the problem is that when space rocks bump into other space rocks
they bump into more space rocks. So no JPL orbital will ever be 100% accurate always.
Collisions between asteroids are exceedingly rare, even within the asteroid belt. It's not like star wars. A chain reaction like the one you described would be even more rare.
Source
Discovered in 1989, asteroid 4179 Toutatis is classed as a Potentially Hazardous Asteroid. On this approach to Earth, Toutatis will pass within 4.3 million miles - that's very close in astronomical terms for an object that is 3.4 miles in diameter!
A newfound asteroid gave Earth a close shave early today, zipping between our planet and the moon just two days after astronomers first spotted it.