One of the more interesting things science can do for us is
help us to imagine the end of the world. Whether it is born out of fear or just
a sick fascination with our own demise, the number of disaster movies that hit
theatres around the world every couple of years speaks to the fact that people
like to imagine something big and bad going down. Among the most popular
doomsday fantasies is the notion of a space rock smashing into the Earth.
But it isn’t just the size of a meteor that determines the
damage it will cause. A number of factors go into calculating what happens when
we welcome space rocks to the neighbourhood. Among the most important factors
are the object’s speed, the angle at which it hits the atmosphere, what it is
made of, and where it hits (water or land). Fortunately, there is an online
tool called Impact Earth that
is hosted by Purdue University and allows you to model any death-from-above
scenario you want to dream up. With that in mind, let’s do some imagining:
Scenario 1: 30m
object made of porous rock travelling at 30 km/s hits at 45 degrees over land
20 km from where you are standing.
In terms of large asteroid impact scenarios, this is one of
the ones to hope for. According to Impact Earth, this object would begin to
break up at an altitude of 81,600 meters. No crater is formed, although chunks
do hit the Earth. Mostly what happens is the object explodes 21,700 meters
above the ground with a force approximately equal the to bomb dropped on
Hiroshima at the end of WWII. About a minute and a half after the explosion an
air blast as loud as heavy traffic blows by, but you survive the event despite
being relatively close by. The interesting thing about this scenario is that it
played out in reality only a few years ago over Russia
in February of 2013. A number of buildings close to the explosion had their
windows broken and people were knocked off their feet, but no one was killed.
Scenario 2: 500m wide
object made of dense rock travelling at 20 km/s hits at 70 degrees in the ocean
200 km from your beach house.
This is a bad day to be at the beach. This object hits the
Earth with a force ten times for powerful than the largest atomic bomb ever
exploded - the Zhar Bomb. The first effect you feel is a 7.1 magnitude earthquake that begins
40 seconds after impact – imagine a truck crashing into your house. The walls
crack, dishes break, but that’s the least of your worries. Even before the
shaking begins you would see a fireball that appears 4 times larger than the
sun (in reality it is 3.6 km across). For a minute and a half after the blast
the heat of the fireball is double the heat you feel from the sun. Three and a
half minutes after touchdown you are hit by a dusting of super-heated particles
that used to be the seafloor and ten minutes after impact a blast of air
shatters any windows left standing. If you survive all that, you have about an
hour to get as far away from the coast as you can before a wave between 9 and
17 meters (30 to 60 feet) high arrives to finish you off.
Scenario 3: 5 km wide
object made of iron travelling at 35 km/s hits the Rocky Mountains at 90 degree
angle to the ground while you watch from Vancouver.
You’ve pretty much had it with this one. You won’t have to
worry about the air-blast that will knock down every building and tree for hundreds of kilometers, 35
minutes after impact. You won’t have to worry about the fiery particles that
used to be a mountain range reaching you 7 minutes after the blast. You don’t even
have to worry about the magnitude 9.9 earthquake that begins 2.3 minutes after
touchdown. What will finish you off in short order is the blast itself, which
will go off with 76,600,000 MT of force (766,000 more powerful than that puny Zhar Bomb). The heat given off by the 100 km wide fireball will give
you third degree burns over most of your body, ignite your clothing and even
set any glass around you on fire. This impact would throw enough material into
the atmosphere to block out the sun for about a year and leave a crater 136 km
across and 1.3 km deep. Fortunately, even this is not a world-ender. The rock
that marked the end for the dinosaurs was roughly twice this size.
We’ve only just scratched - okay, maybe severely dented - the surface of what meteor impacts
can be like, but as you can see it is rarely a pretty picture. Worse still is
that something Scenario 3 sized could surprise us, giving little to no warning
before impact. Keep that in mind next time you’re trying to decide whether to
splurge on your next vacation.
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