#13 That happens quite regularly. On September 17th, a 17 meter asteroid passed within .9 LD of earth. Not 100 feet, but for illustrative purposes, close enough for government work. I believe there's one coming November 3rd as well.
As often as 3-4x per year or more we get near misses that are less than 1LD. There was one this past spring that was .03LD that flew right past without a hitch. Check out spaceweather's site for cool info.
#11 I had this problem with my Sony Ericsson phone years ago so I changed the sound file with my pc (you can't delete it, but change the name so it can't find it when taking a picture) but did this for school this time
#9 The Universe is expanding, but not at a constant rate. Some celestial objects will come closer to us and some will recede at various speeds. Some will even remain static. That being said, slim chance mankind will be alive in the 100,000 light years it will take for it to even be noticeable if we were alive. So rest easy my little one, we're safe tonight.
#13 That happens quite regularly. On September 17th, a 17 meter asteroid passed within .9 LD of earth. Not 100 feet, but for illustrative purposes, close enough for government work. I believe there's one coming November 3rd as well.
As often as 3-4x per year or more we get near misses that are less than 1LD. There was one this past spring that was .03LD that flew right past without a hitch. Check out spaceweather's site for cool info.
#11 I had this problem with my Sony Ericsson phone years ago so I changed the sound file with my pc (you can't delete it, but change the name so it can't find it when taking a picture) but did this for school this time
#9 The Universe is expanding, but not at a constant rate. Some celestial objects will come closer to us and some will recede at various speeds. Some will even remain static. That being said, slim chance mankind will be alive in the 100,000 light years it will take for it to even be noticeable if we were alive. So rest easy my little one, we're safe tonight.
As often as 3-4x per year or more we get near misses that are less than 1LD. There was one this past spring that was .03LD that flew right past without a hitch. Check out spaceweather's site for cool info.
The Universe is expanding, but not at a constant rate.
Some celestial objects will come closer to us and some will recede at various speeds. Some will even remain static.
That being said, slim chance mankind will be alive in the 100,000 light years it will take for it to even be noticeable if we were alive.
So rest easy my little one, we're safe tonight.