K.I.L.E.R said:Can someone please clear this up.
Are we seriously going to die?
Yes, in about 80 years. Unless we have an accident of course. Or some bad disease. Or a heart attack. Or get murdered.
K.I.L.E.R said:Can someone please clear this up.
Are we seriously going to die?
Neeyik said:Okay KILER - the joke is old and getting quite tiresome now. Can we not have this silly "we're all going to die" business every time somebody posts a thread about bloody asteroids or anything astronomical?
And KILER re-read what he posted, its 50% chance that they will ALL miss...
K.I.L.E.R said:I would like to deconstruct the probabilities.
Jabbah said:Dont forget that there are not actually 3200 of these things hurtling towards us, not even 1. Its going considerably to the side of us. But anyway, prob. of 1 out of 3200 asteroids hittin us is 0.5. Now if you only have 10 asteroids in the same space the prob for one of those hitting is drastically less.
Cool, then you already know the answer.K.I.L.E.R said:I already know those 2 calculations/equations, what's your point?
london-boy said:Slayer...?
Jabbah said:I think the main point that was being made is that for every 3200 of these things that fly past there is a 50% chance one of the 3200 will hit. Now if you only get 1 every 1500 years then there is a 50% chance that the earth will get hit by one every 4.8 million years.
K.I.L.E.R said:So a few may stray towards us but nothing serious would happen?
nutball said:Cool, then you already know the answer.
- work out the area of a circle with radius equal to that of the Earth (say 6370km)
- work out the area of a circle with radius equal to that of the Moons orbit (say 384400km)
- divide the first by the second, this gives you the fraction of a random stream of asteroids passing within the Moon's orbit which would impact Earth (~0.03% by my maths)
Granted this doesn't actually give you the correct ratio, because it assumes the trajectory is unaffected by the Earth's gravity, but I doubt it's *that* far off (maybe an order of magnitude, or two )
If you really want to work it out, it'll make some good coding practice for you in numerical integration! The physics is all easy, just Newton's Laws.
Interesting that you choose now to act all serious and mature.K.I.L.E.R said:There are always PMs for this sort of thing.
If you need to post anything personal then please use PMs.
If you have a list of behavioural changes you'd like me to implement then please PM me about it.
There's no real magic to Monte Carlo, except maybe interpreting the statistical significance of your results.K.I.L.E.R said:I figured you'd make me work it out.
When I went over Monte Carlo I struggled to find anything special about it that I didn't already know or done in class.
It's named after Monte Carlo, in Monaco, which is a haven for gambling and other probabilisitic methods for extracting money from people.Why does everyone give funny little names to basic things like that?
Neeyik said:Interesting that you choose now to act all serious and mature.
nutball said:There's no real magic to Monte Carlo, except maybe interpreting the statistical significance of your results.
It's named after Monte Carlo, in Monaco, which is a haven for gambling and other probabilisitic methods for extracting money from people.
Deepak said:Can't Earth's gravitational pull suck asteroids passing close to her?