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Orbit is definitely NOT a waste of time :)

TAandy

Diamond Member
anyone notice this recently?

from the telegraph...
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/science/...close-encounter-with-two-large-asteroids.html


"Two large asteroids narrowly miss earth, Nasa said:

Two large asteroids have narrowly avoided the earth after the objects passed within the moon and our planet’s orbit, Nasa scientists said.



The two objects were only identified at the weekend by the Nasa-funded Catalina Sky Survey near Tucson, Arizona, during a routine sky scan.

The first asteroid, christened 2010 RX30, was about 65 feet (20 metres) in diameter and flew past at a distance of 154,000 miles early at 9:51am on Wednesday.

The second, called 2010 RF12, was roughly two-thirds the size of its big brother and estimated to pass within just 49,088 miles of Earth hours later.

While they were visible to many amateur stargazers, space agency researchers said neither asteroid posed a risk to earth.

Experts, however, said the “double-whammy” served as a reminder of other potentially hazardous objects expected to narrowly miss Earth in coming years.

Nasa estimates that asteroids smaller than 25 metres in diameter would burn up while entering the atmosphere and cause no damage.

Scientists said while it was common to witness a single asteroid at such close range it was rare to see two make such close passes. Figures show about 50 million NEO’s (Near Earth Objects) pass by every day.

But what made this event so significant was that the two asteroids passed so close to Earth on the same day within hours of each other.

"This is the first time we've seen (two) combined within a 24-hour period but that's probably because we don't know everything that is out there," said Lindley Johnson, program executive of the Near-Earth Object program at Nasa’s headquarters in Washington.

Donald Yeomans, another manager of the programme, which detects and tracks potentially hazardous asteroids and comets, said neither asteroid was visible to the naked eye.

He added that when they were nearest both asteroids were visible from moderate strength amateur telescopes.

In July, Nasa experts gave details of an asteroid measuring more than 600 yards wide, which has a one-in-a-thousand chance of colliding with Earth in 2182.

That collision promises to create more damage than that of the atomic bombing of Hiroshima.

Preceding this, Apophis, a 25 million ton celestial body will narrowly miss our planet three times in succession.

The first near-miss is expected on the superstitious date of Friday 13th 2029.

"I think this is Mother Nature's way of firing a shot over the bow and warning Earth-based astronomers that we have a lot of work to do," Dr Yeomans added."

can't think of a better reason to run orbit@home to be honest 🙂
 
Thanks Andy, interesting 🙂

O@H is another 1 of the projects I'd like to run 😉, are the WUs their giving out now based on real data or virtual data?
 
TeAm total of 33 members?

That's not great...
10 active members and 15 with credit.

Not good, not good at all!!!

OK, I'm not putting down any other DC project.Mainly cause i've done most, if not all 🙂

But, finding a cure for cancer, finding alien broadcasts, cures for malaria....

NONE of this will count WHEN, and that's not an if, it's a WHEN, a very large object happens to be on an intersect course with the plant we call home.

then, Kiss All That Goodbye!!
 
I'm attached to the project but haven't been able to get more than one 2-hour work unit per day, and I only get that maybe 3-4 days per week. I'll stay attached and do whatever the project gives me, but it's not much of a contribution...
 
Each WU counts ...

TAandy: I agree. but give the guys a chance: they will come around.
There are only 306K WUs around to be crunched just now, and that is not so much considering that there are approx 4000 active users with more than 6 500 active hosts - that is at most 50 WUs per host to be crunched and some of us are hoarding them (I don't know why I get approx 50 WUs for each comp - probably because I am crunching them 4 - 8 at a time ....)
10 days ago, the project has crunched a total of 17 million credits, now the projects has crunched more than 30 million credits - in just a couple of days we will have doubled the amount of work performed.
There are 70 new computers added every day...

@Fardringle: this will increase. I had that problem for the first week or so ... then I got sufficinet WUs to crunch. I did increase my resource share to 5000 (compared to 100) for a couple of days which effectively crunched every WU I got at once and since then I have had a full cache all the time.
 
TeAm total of 33 members?

That's not great...
10 active members and 15 with credit.

Not good, not good at all!!!

OK, I'm not putting down any other DC project.Mainly cause i've done most, if not all 🙂

But, finding a cure for cancer, finding alien broadcasts, cures for malaria....

NONE of this will count WHEN, and that's not an if, it's a WHEN, a very large object happens to be on an intersect course with the plant we call home.

then, Kiss All That Goodbye!!
You live on a plant??😱, wow that explains a lot mate! lol 😀

heheh j/k

It's true what you say, but I've not long been on F@H & I wanta give that a good shot before I move on again.
What I may well do in the short term is switch my 2nd rig from DPAD to O@H 🙂, it definetly is a project I wanta run! (Right now I'm tweaking it & stabilty testing it, hopefully I finally have it stable at 3.6 GHz 🙂)
 
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