Fire said:
It would certainly be interesting if the Asteroid got caught in Mars gravity very close to the planet but instead of hitting Mars got swung by the gravitational pull of Mars and got redirected towards Earth. We'd be in some serious shit.
bigdaddy said:
Fire said:
It would certainly be interesting if the Asteroid got caught in Mars gravity very close to the planet but instead of hitting Mars got swung by the gravitational pull of Mars and got redirected towards Earth. We'd be in some serious shit.
I think that was a Sci-fi Channel Saturday movie.![]()
137th Gebirg said:
^^^ Good point, being solar powered, if they're cloud-covered for an extended period of time, they may permanently die without hope of a reboot. Kiss another coupl'a millions of dollars goodbye.![]()
TerriO said:
137th Gebirg said:
^^^ Good point, being solar powered, if they're cloud-covered for an extended period of time, they may permanently die without hope of a reboot. Kiss another coupl'a millions of dollars goodbye.![]()
Dude, we kissed that money goodbye in 2003-2004. The only money going into MER now is the funding to keep the science mission going on Earth.
Something like this would, however, make for one helluva place to send the next rover mission.
Money definitely well spent. Those guys were built so well we certainly aren't owed any money on that venture. Of course that's also why I joked about them standing up to an asteroid.TerriO said:
Dude, we kissed that money goodbye in 2003-2004. The only money going into MER now is the funding to keep the science mission going on Earth.
Man, we just can't catch a break.Fire said:
It would certainly be interesting if the Asteroid got caught in Mars gravity very close to the planet but instead of hitting Mars got swung by the gravitational pull of Mars and got redirected towards Earth. We'd be in some serious shit.
OhZedMasTree said:
Man, we just can't catch a break.Fire said:
It would certainly be interesting if the Asteroid got caught in Mars gravity very close to the planet but instead of hitting Mars got swung by the gravitational pull of Mars and got redirected towards Earth. We'd be in some serious shit.
I, for one, really hope this thing does collide with Mars. Just imagine the opportunity to study an event like this; imagine the priceless scientific data.
And if the aftermath does cause the death of the rovers, at least they'll have gone out with a bang!
Awfully unlikely, too. I wouldn't bet any serious money on it, if I were you.Fire said:
It would certainly be interesting if the Asteroid got caught in Mars gravity very close to the planet but instead of hitting Mars got swung by the gravitational pull of Mars and got redirected towards Earth. We'd be in some serious shit.
I think you're figuring on an Earth-density atmosphere to suspend and transport said material to the rovers' locations. Just how well would Mars' atmosphere circulate the ejecta from an asteroid strike and how close/where, relative to the impact point, would a rover have to be to be significantly affected by this material?Johnny Rico said:
In any case, if an aseroid would hit Mars now, it'd probably stir up a large amount of debris and dust and then really kill off the Rovers.
137th Gebirg said:
^^^ Good point, being solar powered, if they're cloud-covered for an extended period of time, they may permanently die without hope of a reboot. Kiss another coupl'a millions of dollars goodbye.![]()
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