Not exact matches
Revelations is clearly very accurate, clearly agreeing with moden science computer models regarding global warming predictions,
what will happen when a large
asteroid strikes (note the word «when») and many
other things unknown to science prior to the 21st Century.
And then I try envisioning
what it will be like when another, smaller
asteroid enters their orbits and takes part in that spinning dance around each
other.
FAR OUT Mars may have formed near
what's now the
asteroid belt, much farther away from the sun than the
other rocky planets.
What will get us first — an
asteroid, a supervolcano, the burning heat of the aging sun or some
other calamity?
What will happen to TC4 after its flyby, and how is NASA looking out for
other close - approach
asteroids?
Paul Chodas, manager of the Center for Near - Earth Object Studies (CNEOS) at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, tells Newsweek
what the space agency and
other organizations around the globe are doing to perform this exercise — and how they plan to protect Earth from
asteroids in the future.
The real question is
what population size can maintain technology sufficient to provide good healthcare, that enables us to colonise
other planets (if such a thing is really viable), mine the
asteroids, and deflect a possible
asteroid that is on a collision course.
* it:... specifically (as it had been mentioned before) I suggested that maybe it would be easier to get an
asteroid there rather than shoot stuff up with a rail gun launch system (I think that's
what was being discussed by
others).