http://www.lpl.arizona.edu/impacteffects/
And yes, I'm geekier than most.

Moderator: Station Managers
Otori wrote:Leave it up to those nutballs at Arizona University to give you a "impact simulator". Put in whatever numbers you want, but if you need some realistic impacts of the past there is a link to some on the main page.
http://www.lpl.arizona.edu/impacteffects/
And yes, I'm geekier than most.
Wulfven wrote:Otori wrote:Leave it up to those nutballs at Arizona University to give you a "impact simulator". Put in whatever numbers you want, but if you need some realistic impacts of the past there is a link to some on the main page.
http://www.lpl.arizona.edu/impacteffects/
And yes, I'm geekier than most.
Rawk on! Now.. Someone needs to throw the results from this into some sort of visual representation... ..and I'll have something shiny to keep me entertained at work for hours..
"Hmm.. Let's see.. If I aim this meteor at the White House, how little damage to the surrounding area can I manage and still insure total annhilation?"
Your Inputs:
Distance from Impact: 161.00 km = 99.98 miles
Projectile Diameter: 402.33 m = 1319.66 ft = 0.25 miles
Projectile Density: 1000 kg/m3
Impact Velocity: 48.30 km/s = 29.99 miles/s
Impact Angle: 56 degrees
Target Density: 1000 kg/m3
Target Type: Competent Rock or saturated soil
Energy:
3.98 x 1019 Joules = 9.50 x 103 MegaTons TNT
The average interval between impacts of this size somewhere on Earth is 1.3 x 105years
Crater Size:
Transient Crater Diameter: 8.17 km = 5.07 miles
Final Crater Diameter: 10.80 km = 6.71 miles
The crater formed is a complex crater.
Thermal Radiation:
Time for maximum radiation: 0.14 seconds after impact
Visible fireball radius: 4.8 km = 3.0 miles
The fireball appears 6.8 times larger than the sun
Thermal Exposure: 4.59 x 104 Joules/m2
Duration of Irradiation: 9 seconds
Radiant flux (relative to the sun): 5.2
Seismic Effects:
The major seismic shaking will arrive at approximately 32.2 seconds.
Richter Scale Magnitude: 7.3
Mercalli Scale Intensity at a distance of 161 km:
VI. Felt by all. Many frightened and run outdoors. Persons walk unsteadily. Windows, dishes, glassware broken. Knickknacks, books, etc., off shelves. Pictures off walls. Furniture moved or overturned. Weak plaster and masonry D cracked. Small bells ring (church, school). Trees, bushes shaken (visibly, or heard to rustle).
VII. Difficult to stand. Noticed by drivers of motor cars. Hanging objects quiver. Furniture broken. Damage to masonry D, including cracks. Weak chimneys broken at roof line. Fall of plaster, loose bricks, stones, tiles, cornices (also unbraced parapets and architectural ornaments). Some cracks in masonry C. Waves on ponds; water turbid with mud. Small slides and caving in along sand or gravel banks. Large bells ring. Concrete irrigation ditches damaged.
Masonry C. Ordinary workmanship and mortar; no extreme weaknesses like failing to tie in at corners, but neither reinforced nor designed against horizontal forces.
Masonry D. Weak materials, such as adobe; poor mortar; low standards of workmanship; weak horizontally.
Ejecta:
The ejecta will arrive approximately 184.0 seconds after the impact.
Average Ejecta Thickness: 1.1 cm = 0.44 inches
Mean Fragment Diameter: 1.9 cm = 0.76 inches
Air Blast:
The air blast will arrive at approximately 536.7 seconds.
Peak Overpressure: 18990.2 Pa = 0.1899 bars = 2.6966 psi
Max wind velocity: 37.7 m/s = 84.4 mph
Sound Intensity: 86 dB (Loud as heavy traffic)
Damage Description:
Glass windows will shatter.
Metalynx wrote:*absently clocks Veldron over the head with a empty bottle as he wanders away muttering to himself*
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