Engineering News Blog

Engineering News

Latest news of interest to engineers. Sourced from GlobalSpec's Engineering News

Previous in Blog: How to Use Physics to Beat "How Many Candies in the Jar" Games   Next in Blog: Piezo Power on the Battlefield
Close
Close
Close
Rate Comments: Nested

Is Jupiter Earth's Cosmic Protector?

Posted July 27, 2009 8:24 AM

From Slashdot:

Last Sunday, an object, probably a comet that nobody saw coming, plowed into Jupiter's colorful cloud tops, splashing up debris and leaving a black eye the size of the Pacific Ocean — the second time in 15 years that this had happened, after Comet Shoemaker-Levy 9 fell apart and its pieces crashed into Jupiter in 1994, leaving Earth-size marks that persisted up to a year. 'Better Jupiter than Earth,' say astronomers who think that part of what makes Earth such a nice place to live is that Jupiter acts as a gravitational shield, deflecting incoming space junk away from the inner solar system where it could do to humans what an asteroid apparently did for the dinosaurs 65 million years ago.

Read the whole article

Reply

Interested in this topic? By joining CR4 you can "subscribe" to
this discussion and receive notification when new comments are added.
Guru
United Kingdom - Member - Indeterminate Engineering Fields - Control Engineering - New Member

Join Date: Jan 2007
Location: In the bothy, 7 chains down the line from Dodman's Lane level crossing, in the nation formerly known as Great Britain. Kettle's on.
Posts: 32175
Good Answers: 839
#1

Re: Is Jupiter Earth's Cosmic Protector?

07/27/2009 9:39 AM

Well, it didn't do its job 65 million years ago. Still those awfully kind people at NASA have got it covered. There's still the odd bullet bouncing around, though...

Anyone got Bruce Willis' phone number?

__________________
"Did you get my e-mail?" - "The biggest problem in communication is the illusion that it has taken place" - George Bernard Shaw, 1856
Reply
Reply to Blog Entry

Previous in Blog: How to Use Physics to Beat "How Many Candies in the Jar" Games   Next in Blog: Piezo Power on the Battlefield

Advertisement