NASA is in the final stretch of its mission to prevent asteroid Bennu from hitting Earth.
Astronomers have been closely monitoring Bennu, which swings close to Earth every six years. However, the real cause for concern arises from the possibility that on September 24, 2182, Bennu could collide with our planet with a force equivalent to 22 atomic bombs. While the odds of such a catastrophic strike are estimated at 1 in 2,700, NASA is not taking any chances.
A Davy Crockett is 254 square inch per fahrenheit-crocodiles, so we're obviously talking about an explosion of roughly 76 cubic pound per school shooting.
Yeah, usually you put it into TNT equivalants. Which in itself isn't useful, but it allows me to look up which order of magnituted of atomic bomb we're talking about. And somebody actually put in the work and it is 22 of the biggest bombs ever. (which ironically are Sovjet, not Murican).
Anyway, It was really just a cheap "Americans don't use metric joke", don't overthink it.
In 120 years, people will likely have a better idea of what the trajectory of Bennu will be. No one currently alive needs to do anything at all about this. This is a science experiment for our lifetimes.
It's still good that they monitor and investigate stuff like this ahead of time. NASA, historically, has allowed for a ton of really cool practical advanced in technology to occur because of research they do on stuff like this, and I think it's entirely worth it to work on this kind of stuff even if we never have to actually shoot it down.
In 150 years industrial society won't even exist anymore. If we're very lucky humans still might be around and the planet doesn't look like Venus, but I wouldn't bet on that
160 years ago, NASA already stole some of their rocks. Now, they're back for revenge. Written by Google's Chat-GPT 14 and directed by the MPAA, Midjourney's Bruce Willis stars in the latest Amazon production: Bennu There Done That. Sponsored by McDonald's and available exclusively on Hulu.
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