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Just out of interest, how big a meteorite would be
needed to cause a equivalent tsunami to the one in south east Asia ? Not an easy question I guess. H. |
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Probably depends on speed at impact since E=0.5mv^2.
We need to know the energy that the quake dumped into the ocean as the tsunami. Martin -- M.A.Poyser Tel.: 07967 110890 Manchester, U.K. http://www.fleetie.demon.co.uk |
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On Sun, 2 Jan 2005 17:19:56 -0000, "howard" wrote:
| Just out of interest, how big a meteorite would be | needed to cause a equivalent tsunami to the one in | south east Asia ? Not an easy question I guess. | Not a simple comparison as you say. The Asian tsunami was caused by a relatively slow (several seconds) slumping of the ocean floor. A large meteorite hits at one hell of a speed. -- Dave Fawthrop Subscribe to uk.net.news.announce. A low volume *civilised* newsgroup with only the essential information about what is happening in the uk.* newsgroups, Request For Discussions (RFDs) Call For Votes (CFVs) etc. |
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In message , Fleetie
writes Probably depends on speed at impact since E=0.5mv^2. We need to know the energy that the quake dumped into the ocean as the tsunami. Martin Howard asked how big a meteorite would be needed to create a tsunami like the one in Asia (hint: quoting is useful) I don't know how much energy goes into the wave, but the total energy of a Richter 9 earthquake is about 10^25 ergs, which is the same as the kinetic energy of a 250 meter rock moving at 50 km/s. Again, I don't know how much energy would go into the wave if it hit in deep water. As you'd expect, there's a lot about this on the Web, and http://www1.tpgi.com.au/users/tps-seti/spacegd7.html#tsunamiimpact looks interesting. -- What have they got to hide? Release the ESA Beagle 2 report. Remove spam and invalid from address to reply. |
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"Jonathan Silverlight"
Howard asked how big a meteorite would be needed to create a tsunami like the one in Asia (hint: quoting is useful) The question "How big ... ?" is invalid as it stands. You need to specify at least density and closing speed, as well as whether the size referred to that before encountering the atmosphere and having possibly large amounts of the meterorite burnt off, or whether it was the size at impact having travelled through the atmosphere, and probably other variables too. Martin -- M.A.Poyser Tel.: 07967 110890 Manchester, U.K. http://www.fleetie.demon.co.uk |
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In message , Dave Fawthrop
writes On Sun, 2 Jan 2005 17:19:56 -0000, "howard" wrote: | Just out of interest, how big a meteorite would be | needed to cause a equivalent tsunami to the one in | south east Asia ? Not an easy question I guess. | Not a simple comparison as you say. The Asian tsunami was caused by a relatively slow (several seconds) slumping of the ocean floor. A large meteorite hits at one hell of a speed. Http://www.lpl.arizona.edu/impacteffects/ There's a Javascript program here for the enthusiasts. Have fun Brian -- Brian Howie |
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In message , Kitty writes
Ive heard the power generated by the earthquake was compared to "1,000 Hiroshima's" Is this a realistic guess, or just media fodder ? It's actually a gross understatement. The figure is closer to a million Hiroshimas, 32 thousand million tons of TNT. Another useful web site is http://www.seismo.unr.edu/ftp/pub/louie/class/100/magnitude.html, which has a really boggling fact - the Earth receives 1000 x that energy as sunlight every day. Suitably applied, it would split the planet. I would have thought wave size was simply proportional to the volume of displacement of water by a meteorite ? It's more complicated than that in shallow water, which is where people get hurt. But the problem is working out how much water is displaced in the first place. There are figures for atomic and other explosions, but extrapolation is always dodgy. |
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