From: Michael S. Lorrey (retroman@together.net)
Date: Sat Jan 09 1999 - 12:35:42 MST
Spike Jones wrote:
> > - spike wrote
> > >if successful, this revenous simpleton would be dangerous as
> > >hell but incapable of crossing interstellar space. spike
> >
> > Samael wrote: Except that microscopic particles have travlled from Earth to
> > Mars and visa versa. Dust is freuently thrown out of earths gravity well by
> > meteor strieks
> > (frequently on a geological time scale).
>
> of course, interstellar space is about 5 orders of magintude larger than
> interplanetary space. i need to do the calcs, but intuition tells me
> a meteor could not punch material out of the sun's gravity well, and even
> if so, the simple relicator would not survive the jillions of years of
> wandering thru i.s. space. guess that would explain why we have
> never had one fall on this planet.
Actually, its a matter of proportions, obviously. A 10 ton meteor impacting a 1 ton
meteor will obviously impart such energy that peices of the second meteor which are
repelled along the path of the first meteor will have more than 3 times the
velocity of the first meteor.... which should be in excess of the sun's escape
velocity....
>
>
> a grey-gooed double star might be able to goo its neighbor perhaps. spike
If you assume that the goo is actually a goo, rather than a more solid structure,
then impacts will obviously be absorbed with far less ejecta than a similar strick
on a solid structure like a ferrous or cabonacious(sp?) chrondrite meteor.
Mike Lorrey
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