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I'm a screenwriter and I have a question:
If a big enough asteroid hit Jupiter and a piece of Jupiter broke off, could it become a rogue asteroid and head for Earth? (I've heard that Jupiter's many moons were once actually part of Jupiter that broke off.) If not, what type of situation can be proposed that would produce a threatening rogue asteroid? -- From the Desk of Lise Eleanor http://www3.sympatico.ca/l_e/ |
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Lise Eleanor wrote:
I'm a screenwriter and I have a question: If a big enough asteroid hit Jupiter and a piece of Jupiter broke off, could it become a rogue asteroid and head for Earth? (I've heard that Jupiter's many moons were once actually part of Jupiter that broke off.) If not, what type of situation can be proposed that would produce a threatening rogue asteroid? No, Jupiter is huge and largely gaseous, so even if the largest asteroid hit it, Jupiter would more than likely swallow the darn thing whole (might raise a nice plume of gas, but no "rogue" asteroid"). There are lots of asteroids in orbits that come near to or cross the orbit of the Earth, and minor perturbations by the planets over long periods of time or a collision with another asteroid might push it into an Earth-impact trajectory. Clear skies to you. -- David W. Knisely Prairie Astronomy Club: http://www.prairieastronomyclub.org Hyde Memorial Observatory: http://www.hydeobservatory.info/ ********************************************** * Attend the 11th Annual NEBRASKA STAR PARTY * * July 18-23, 2004, Merritt Reservoir * * http://www.NebraskaStarParty.org * ********************************************** |
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Thank you David.
What would be the most likely origin of a rogue asteroid? I'm only asking because if you or one of your astronomer buddies goes to see this movie, I need you to walk out after saying, "Damn, that was bang on info!" Though I don't get much into the meteor/asteroid itself, if I could build an element into the script that is "plausible theory" about a rogue asteroid, then it is believeable. I already have all the specs as to the damage report after collision of a 10km diameter projectile with Earth. -- From the Desk of Lise Eleanor http://www3.sympatico.ca/l_e/ "David Knisely" wrote in message ... Lise Eleanor wrote: I'm a screenwriter and I have a question: If a big enough asteroid hit Jupiter and a piece of Jupiter broke off, could it become a rogue asteroid and head for Earth? (I've heard that Jupiter's many moons were once actually part of Jupiter that broke off.) If not, what type of situation can be proposed that would produce a threatening rogue asteroid? No, Jupiter is huge and largely gaseous, so even if the largest asteroid hit it, Jupiter would more than likely swallow the darn thing whole (might raise a nice plume of gas, but no "rogue" asteroid"). There are lots of asteroids in orbits that come near to or cross the orbit of the Earth, and minor perturbations by the planets over long periods of time or a collision with another asteroid might push it into an Earth-impact trajectory. Clear skies to you. -- David W. Knisely Prairie Astronomy Club: http://www.prairieastronomyclub.org Hyde Memorial Observatory: http://www.hydeobservatory.info/ ********************************************** * Attend the 11th Annual NEBRASKA STAR PARTY * * July 18-23, 2004, Merritt Reservoir * * http://www.NebraskaStarParty.org * ********************************************** |
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"Lise Eleanor" wrote in
news ![]() Thank you David. What would be the most likely origin of a rogue asteroid? I'm only asking because if you or one of your astronomer buddies goes to see this movie, I need you to walk out after saying, "Damn, that was bang on info!" Though I don't get much into the meteor/asteroid itself, if I could build an element into the script that is "plausible theory" about a rogue asteroid, then it is believeable. I already have all the specs as to the damage report after collision of a 10km diameter projectile with Earth. If it's going to be a "sudden" asteroid then it must come from the direction of the sun and thus invisible to us as observers, because we cannot observe in daylight. If it came from any other direction it would be discovered months to years in adavance of possible Earth impact. |
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Paul:
Good comment. Okay, in my script, the gov't has known it was coming for almost 10 years. So, the scenario of the asteroid being deflected off Jupiter's cloud tops would work with this that you said, "If it came from any other direction it would be discovered months to years in adavance of possible Earth impact", based on your principle, correct? This is good, because there is some technical jargon I avoided because I didn't know how to explain why 1998FC (I think that's what it was called) was a NEA that we didn't know about until it had already passed us. Very, very good. We call these little, but important, considerations "plot holes". I'm trying to work out the plot holes. -- From the Desk of Lise Eleanor http://www3.sympatico.ca/l_e/ "Paul Lawler" wrote in message . 170.93... "Lise Eleanor" wrote in news ![]() Thank you David. What would be the most likely origin of a rogue asteroid? I'm only asking because if you or one of your astronomer buddies goes to see this movie, I need you to walk out after saying, "Damn, that was bang on info!" Though I don't get much into the meteor/asteroid itself, if I could build an element into the script that is "plausible theory" about a rogue asteroid, then it is believeable. I already have all the specs as to the damage report after collision of a 10km diameter projectile with Earth. If it's going to be a "sudden" asteroid then it must come from the direction of the sun and thus invisible to us as observers, because we cannot observe in daylight. If it came from any other direction it would be discovered months to years in adavance of possible Earth impact. |
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![]() Lise Eleanor wrote: Paul: Good comment. Okay, in my script, the gov't has known it was coming for almost 10 years. So, the scenario of the asteroid being deflected off Jupiter's cloud tops would work with this that you said, "If it came from any other direction it would be discovered months to years in adavance of possible Earth impact", based on your principle, correct? This is good, because there is some technical jargon I avoided because I didn't know how to explain why 1998FC (I think that's what it was called) was a NEA that we didn't know about until it had already passed us. Very, very good. We call these little, but important, considerations "plot holes". I'm trying to work out the plot holes. Check out these links here to the asteroid Toutatis (Celtic for "god of war"), which some believe will eventually slam into earth due to its unusal orbit so close to earth. Also some believe that most if not all of the asteroid belt was formed long ago by the collision of two planets, leaving the destroyed remains forming into a belt. Others believe that the asteroid belt is composed of captured debris from other collisions. Some even believe that our moon is a captured remnant of two planets which collided aeons ago. -- "Asteroid Toutatis, officially numbered 4179, was discovered by French astronomers in 1989. Researchers can't predict far enough into the future to rule out Toutatis ever slamming into Earth, so it is listed officially as a Potentially Hazardous Asteroid. NASA says it won't hit for at least the next six centuries." - Robert Roy Britt of space.com http://www.unknowncountry.com/news/?id=3763 http://www.globalpsychics.com/lp/Pro...s.htm#Toutatis http://www.artpolitic.org/infopedia/..._Toutatis.html http://seekers.100megs6.com/Asteroid%20Toutatis.htm http://www.cyber-north.com/ufo/toutatis.html |
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How can an asteroid be a 'rogue.' Are they bad? Don't they just exist. Is
it the asteroid's fault that he just happens to exist on a collision course with earth. I guess it would not be exciting to say that someone just discovered it instead of using some catastrophic Velakovsky-esque planetary collision. Ahh screw it...didn't Hitchcock say "if you want reality look out the window"? BP "Lise Eleanor" wrote in message . .. Paul: Good comment. Okay, in my script, the gov't has known it was coming for almost 10 years. So, the scenario of the asteroid being deflected off Jupiter's cloud tops would work with this that you said, "If it came from any other direction it would be discovered months to years in adavance of possible Earth impact", based on your principle, correct? This is good, because there is some technical jargon I avoided because I didn't know how to explain why 1998FC (I think that's what it was called) was a NEA that we didn't know about until it had already passed us. Very, very good. We call these little, but important, considerations "plot holes". I'm trying to work out the plot holes. -- From the Desk of Lise Eleanor http://www3.sympatico.ca/l_e/ "Paul Lawler" wrote in message . 170.93... "Lise Eleanor" wrote in news ![]() Thank you David. What would be the most likely origin of a rogue asteroid? I'm only asking because if you or one of your astronomer buddies goes to see this movie, I need you to walk out after saying, "Damn, that was bang on info!" Though I don't get much into the meteor/asteroid itself, if I could build an element into the script that is "plausible theory" about a rogue asteroid, then it is believeable. I already have all the specs as to the damage report after collision of a 10km diameter projectile with Earth. If it's going to be a "sudden" asteroid then it must come from the direction of the sun and thus invisible to us as observers, because we cannot observe in daylight. If it came from any other direction it would be discovered months to years in adavance of possible Earth impact. |
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"Lise Eleanor" wrote in message
. .. Good comment. Okay, in my script, the gov't has known it was coming for almost 10 years. So, the scenario of the asteroid being deflected off Jupiter's cloud tops would work with this that you said, "If it came from If you're really trying for any sort of realism, I would jettison the "asteroid in Jupiter's clouds" bit. Also, highly recommend you go to www.badastronomy.com and read up on his comments of other Asteroid movies; namely, ARMAGEDDON, ASTEROID, and DEEP IMPACT. http://www.badastronomy.com/bad/movi...itageddon.html http://www.badastronomy.com/bad/movies/di2.html http://www.badastronomy.com/bad/tv/asteroid.html Also, take some of the replies on this thread with a grain of salt; one of the people posting is a complete crackpot with delusions. |
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Lise Eleanor posted:
What would be the most likely origin of a rogue asteroid? Well, there really isn't something exactly called a "rogue" asteroid, but there are asteroids in various locations of the solar system. Most are known as "main-belt" asteroids, which sit in an irregular region of space between the orbits of Mars and Jupiter. Then, there are a few others which have rather unusual orbits well out of the main belt. If an object passes close to Jupiter, its orbital path can get changed, so that might be a major reason to have one sort of "come out of the blue". By this time in the solar system's existance, most asteroids still in space have moved to fairly stable orbits, since if they were perturbed by a close Jupiter pass, they would most likely either end up hitting something (like Jupiter itself) or be cast out of the inner solar system by a gravitational encounter with a large planet. Most of those which could have hit have already hit, so we don't have a huge amount to worry about there. However, comets are the real "wild cards", as they come from deep-space in some rather elongated orbits which can sometimes get strongly perturbed by Jupiter into the inner solar system to perhaps an orbit with an Earth-crossing path. This is one reason that the movie DEEP IMPACT used a comet rather than an asteroid as the "killer" body. In fact, it has been suggested that many of the known "earth-crossers" (asteroids with orbits which either closely approach or cross the orbit of the Earth) may actually be "dead" comets (comets which have outgassed most of their ices, leaving a small dusty or rocky core that keeps following its original path). Collisions between asteroids may modify the path of the fragments somewhat, but they rarely occur with enough energy to cause a large one to head into the inner solar system where the Earth orbits. Perhaps a collision followed by a close encounter with Jupiter might be a workable scenario if you really want to use an asteroid. However, I wonder if the asteroid/comet impact theme hasn't been overused somewhat in the movies (ie: Deep-Impact, Armageddon, METEOR, ect.). If you want some good technical advise, I might contact someone at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, California, as they might be able to "cook-up" a workable scenario (just follow their recommendations *to the letter*, as, despite some good technical advice, the boys behind DEEP-IMPACT and the absolutely horrid ARMAGEDDON did not, and both movies suffered for it). Clear skies to you. -- David W. Knisely Prairie Astronomy Club: http://www.prairieastronomyclub.org Hyde Memorial Observatory: http://www.hydeobservatory.info/ ********************************************** * Attend the 11th Annual NEBRASKA STAR PARTY * * July 18-23, 2004, Merritt Reservoir * * http://www.NebraskaStarParty.org * ********************************************** |
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![]() Lise Eleanor wrote: I'm a screenwriter and I have a question: If a big enough asteroid hit Jupiter and a piece of Jupiter broke off, could it become a rogue asteroid and head for Earth? (I've heard that Jupiter's many moons were once actually part of Jupiter that broke off.) Jupiter is gas planet. In the unlikely event an asteroid strike produces something out of Jupiter, this something will be a puff of gas. If not, what type of situation can be proposed that would produce a threatening rogue asteroid? Take a look he http://seds.lpl.arizona.edu/seds/cha...t/science.html Look under "Origins". Regards, - Alex |
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