Recreating Astroid Strike That Killed Dinosaurs | Strip The Cosmos

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  • čas přidán 10. 06. 2015
  • The dinosaurs died off after a massive asteroid strike with a billion times more energy than the atomic bombs dropped on Hiroshima. A team at NASA studies the impact to learn more.
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Komentáře • 330

  • @animationspace8550
    @animationspace8550 Před 3 lety +385

    This is so annoyingly dramatized but the replication is intriguing

    • @goodkrypollo1706
      @goodkrypollo1706 Před 3 lety +13

      Yea it's not a big deal or anything that a large rock came from space and made thousands of species go extinct.

    • @trvth1s
      @trvth1s Před 3 lety +21

      @@goodkrypollo1706 Thousands?
      Millions.
      Almost all birds clades died out. Half of all mammal clades died out [this means that 99.9% of mammals died, a few survived in only 3 clades].
      All non avian dinosaurs died out. All pterosaurs died out. The oceans were devastated. Phytoplankton and vegetation collapsed causing immeasurable extinction in these clades.
      No warm blooded animal bigger than a rat survived.

    • @themechbuilder6171
      @themechbuilder6171 Před 3 lety

      another hall 9000

    • @geometricart7851
      @geometricart7851 Před 3 lety

      @Pantomath gotta keep it entertaining for the sheep.

    • @generalyellor2187
      @generalyellor2187 Před 3 lety

      Yes, but only because of the music, I'd say.

  • @NullyBird
    @NullyBird Před 3 lety +545

    The dramatic zoom ins, the out of context quotes, the heartbeat in the background. Yup, it's an American documentary all right...

    • @ortherner
      @ortherner Před 3 lety +6

      lmao

    • @aaronc1407
      @aaronc1407 Před 3 lety +63

      It’s like American cooking shows - someone will boil an egg and the audience will start screaming and clapping like they just discovered the cure for cancer. They’re so ridiculously dramatic.

    • @orsonlepherd7064
      @orsonlepherd7064 Před 3 lety +11

      @@aaronc1407 imagine if the cure for cancer is actually found in front of a studio audience...

    • @mikicerise6250
      @mikicerise6250 Před 3 lety +20

      Obnoxious as hell, but some interesting information in this bit at least. The fast panning and transition to slow motion as the narrator dramatically introduces the steely-eyed academic is amusing, too. xD

    • @pierrecurie
      @pierrecurie Před 3 lety +21

      @@aaronc1407 You have clearly never seen a Japanese cooking show. It's exaggerated a further 99 times, usually with a cute girl with wide eyes saying "sugoi!!!!!!!" as if it's the most amazing thing she's seen in her life. Often times also accompanied by tom and jerry style sound effects.

  • @16517
    @16517 Před 3 lety +219

    I did this as a science experiment in grade 7. Recreating impacts with a slingshot and silica dust, had smilar results. I got a 65% because "it wasn't scientific"

    • @patdohrety2940
      @patdohrety2940 Před 3 lety

      How many impacts did you do?

    • @aquarius5719
      @aquarius5719 Před 2 lety +10

      Physics is not science anymore...
      At least in schools.

    • @signoguns8501
      @signoguns8501 Před 2 lety +1

      @@aquarius5719 What is it then?

    • @kevinatkins1164
      @kevinatkins1164 Před 2 lety +4

      How tf is that not important to Science?

    • @SirKolass
      @SirKolass Před 2 lety +7

      The retards in school think they're rising scientists.

  • @generalflight
    @generalflight Před 3 lety +116

    Underrated video

  • @matthewshoes1
    @matthewshoes1 Před 3 lety +27

    Did this just start appearing in y’all’s recommended?

  • @rico993
    @rico993 Před 3 lety +48

    For reference, the circular disc he's shooting at would roughly represent the entire Gulf of Mexico region. The Chicxulub impact occurred at the tip of what is now the Yucatán Peninsula and was an asteroid about 7 miles wide. So the scale of the disc would fit some of eastern/southern Mexico and the Gulf region of the southeast U.S., along with some of Central America as well.

    • @shimatetsuo2019
      @shimatetsuo2019 Před 2 lety +2

      The Earth looked different back then. There was no Gulf of Mexico.

    • @damondriver6363
      @damondriver6363 Před 2 lety +2

      @@shimatetsuo2019 yep. The chicxulub impact actually helped shape the gulf of Mexico over millions of years. You see the impact zone is at the far southern side of the gulf, the rest of the gulf expands northward towards modern day Florida. Thats because the chicxulub asteroid most likely hit at a 30° angle, moreso facing towards what is now Florida, IE most of the energy from the impact was released Northward. If it had hit at a 90°, or even a 50-60° angle it would have been much much more devastating and not nearly as many creatures would have been able to survive

  • @rebeccaellsbury73
    @rebeccaellsbury73 Před 3 lety +37

    Better title: Cool slowmo video of a fast thing hitting another thing

    • @jkwfo
      @jkwfo Před 2 lety

      yea like " some people did a bad thing "

  • @seanbaskett5506
    @seanbaskett5506 Před 7 měsíci +1

    I absolutely love Dr. Schultz and his always-generous use of onomatopoeia when he gets excited about a light gas gun shot.

  • @darioinfini
    @darioinfini Před 3 lety +8

    I can't stand commercial broadcasting anymore. After years of watching normal people convey information normally on youtube, the pompous retar drama, repetition, music, 0.5 second scene cuts, toddlerized narration.... It's literally designed for toddlers like a Saturday morning cartoon. You can only see it if you step away for a year and re-normalize. Then you can't unsee it.
    Take this information and give it to a PBS SpaceTime or any of the other serious content creators on here, you would learn so much more and be annoyed so much less.

  • @mgsaviation9292
    @mgsaviation9292 Před 3 lety +46

    I remember watching this documentary a few years ago!! This gives me nostalgia!

  • @G_Silent
    @G_Silent Před 3 lety +36

    The only decent video of an impactor simulation

    • @Eliras24
      @Eliras24 Před 3 lety +2

      nah there is one who simulates the effects of the impact in real time. That is amazing, i suggest you to check that one

    • @G_Silent
      @G_Silent Před 3 lety +2

      @@Eliras24 link?

    • @carso1500
      @carso1500 Před 3 lety

      @@G_Silent yeah, link? I want to see

    • @gamertardguardian1299
      @gamertardguardian1299 Před 3 lety

      @@Eliras24 Mate pls giv link

    • @2b2tisafactionsserver72
      @2b2tisafactionsserver72 Před 3 lety +1

      search "chicxulub impact in real time"

  • @adamdeste7376
    @adamdeste7376 Před rokem +6

    I tried to create a car crash with my two plastic toy cars. Turned out very different from reality. No matter at what speed they hit each other, they'd just bounce back with zero damage. So drawing from that, I did the same in a real car and now I am typing this comment from the heaven to warn others.

  • @MrSmackdab
    @MrSmackdab Před 2 lety +6

    Amazing! the way it almost suspended, just hanging so far out there like nothing I've seen! . . . his eyebrows, not the impact

  • @zanderman004
    @zanderman004 Před 3 lety +20

    “So what do you do?”
    “I am THE authority on asteroid impacts!!”

    • @lensercombe
      @lensercombe Před měsícem

      he has no authority it just ges his wife off now he suffers from EDS

  • @mailwiggum
    @mailwiggum Před 3 lety +6

    Just another day at work where he gets to play with that huge gun

  • @queenbrightwingthe3890
    @queenbrightwingthe3890 Před 3 lety +11

    Thats how it looks like when you throw a rock into a sandbox with all your might.

    • @billl1127
      @billl1127 Před 3 lety

      I tried that and my brother got a nasty bruise.

    • @ortherner
      @ortherner Před 3 lety

      no because i dont have that might.

  • @dub4theWin
    @dub4theWin Před 3 lety +3

    Everyone: Pressurized Cannon
    U.S: "GuN"

    • @generalyellor2187
      @generalyellor2187 Před 3 lety

      Another envious foreigner obsessing about someone else's far more productive and interesting country. Ho-hum.

    • @dub4theWin
      @dub4theWin Před 3 lety

      @@generalyellor2187 Except I was born in American and not a foreigner 😂😂 Doofus

  • @emeraldsmith6282
    @emeraldsmith6282 Před 3 lety +4

    My computer trying to simulate the impact: *NUCLEAR MELTDOWN*

  • @taihentv532
    @taihentv532 Před 3 lety +9

    My concentration: *Ultra Sharp*
    1:18
    My concentration: banan

  • @weylandyutani9622
    @weylandyutani9622 Před 3 lety +3

    Everyone is gangster until a extinction level asteroid strikes

  • @landy4497
    @landy4497 Před 3 lety +16

    why is everyone watching this now

  • @MrEnjoivolcom1
    @MrEnjoivolcom1 Před 3 lety +12

    Love how he crosses his fingers, arms, legs, all for good luck! Showing even _scientists_ sometimes need that little extra favor.

  • @Mentos6
    @Mentos6 Před 2 lety

    Very cool video. Too short.

  • @alexprokhorov407
    @alexprokhorov407 Před 3 lety +2

    Now it's time for a full scale test.

  • @karsteinvolle
    @karsteinvolle Před 3 lety +18

    ...so that means that the asteroid almost missed the earth? Man, we were pretty close to not existing at all.
    Also makes me wonder if we will someday find debris and ejecta on the moon and Mars. Like trees and dinosaur bones :)

    • @jollyrancher8727
      @jollyrancher8727 Před 3 lety +7

      Maybe not organic material like that since it wouldve been instantly vaporized. But maybe elements and raw materials found on Earth's surface instead, which is equally as cool :)

    • @CarlosAM1
      @CarlosAM1 Před 5 měsíci

      "Also makes me wonder if we will someday find debris and ejecta on the moon and Mars. Like trees and dinosaur bones" Likely not intact debris, those things would be completely torn apart by such an impact, but that is a very interesting idea. Hell, we have found hundreds of meteorites that originated from mars here on earth, and even one from earth on the moon! Makes ya wonder, could it be possible that life originated not on earth, but on another planet like mars or venus, and then an impact made it land here? What if right now there are a few surviving, living basic organisms on mars?

  • @Viking_6_3
    @Viking_6_3 Před 10 měsíci

    These videos really need to be longer...

  • @nathangreene3869
    @nathangreene3869 Před 3 lety

    Fantastic

  • @simonettacarsonelli
    @simonettacarsonelli Před 3 lety +4

    There was supposed to be a Earth shattering KA'BOOM!!!

  • @RideAcrossTheRiver
    @RideAcrossTheRiver Před 3 lety

    The name 'Peter Schultz' means Rock Police. Too cool!

  • @theelephantintheroom69
    @theelephantintheroom69 Před 3 lety +21

    He spent god knows how much to make that gun, then fired it and said he doesn't think it's what happened 65 million years ago. 🤦‍♂️

    • @pierrecurie
      @pierrecurie Před 3 lety +7

      Similar devices are still used to study hypervelocity impacts. What happens if the ISS hits a frozen pea at 10km/s? Kinda important to know what kind of shielding is necessary.

    • @bjornragnarsson8692
      @bjornragnarsson8692 Před 3 lety +5

      It can fire at different angles as you can see if you finished watching the clip. The second shot from a shallow angle created an egg shaped crater confirming that’s how the asteroid made impact.
      Plus, this is a light gas gun. It’s not used just to study the Chicxulub impact. They can be used to study the impact of any hypersonic projectile against a surface, whether the surface is represented by a piece of the Earth, a satellite, rocket, or ISS as pierrecurie said. They can alter the size, shape, and material composition of the projectile fired, just like they can alter the size, shape, and material composition of the target material.
      Aside from impact events, this apparatus is used to study the effects of supersonic projectiles, whether fired from a weapon or launched into space, and their durability in flight and upon impact.

  • @crispycritterz
    @crispycritterz Před 3 lety +33

    I would suggest that the dinosaurs were already on their way out when the impact took place. The meteor just sped things up.

    • @abdus-s
      @abdus-s Před 3 lety +6

      there is evidence stating a flood basalt eruption was happening at the same time so yeah.

    • @dovahfruit9503
      @dovahfruit9503 Před 3 lety +1

      @@abdus-s and many other events that were likely started by the meteor

    • @nicomortensen5342
      @nicomortensen5342 Před 3 lety +7

      The same could be said about us...

    • @aquarius5719
      @aquarius5719 Před 2 lety +1

      Murphy was born during Jurassic era.

    • @SirKolass
      @SirKolass Před 2 lety +1

      Where's your evidence?

  • @MegaWunna
    @MegaWunna Před 3 lety +4

    Chixulub astorid was really big as big as mount everest and it must have been scary.

  • @yetti423
    @yetti423 Před 2 lety +1

    the music and voice over reminded of south park. Cue over dramatised picking up of a cup. Brilliant scientist though.

  • @robertocassola
    @robertocassola Před 9 lety +4

    Porque no recrearon el impacto en agua..

  • @vascobroma8907
    @vascobroma8907 Před 3 lety +12

    2:15 did they credit Moses?

    • @simonettacarsonelli
      @simonettacarsonelli Před 3 lety +1

      Ironic. The world knows bugger all due to their complete avoidance of the Bible. What a real shame.... They mock the one's who do observe it, yet they know far'call about it's actual contents of historical events (regularly proven by geographical and genealogical findings). The God haters just HATE the possibility of biblical truth. It scars them! "Denial can be an ugly thing" - Ace Ventura: When Nature Calls
      czcams.com/users/results?search_query=denial+can+be+an+ugly+thing

    • @simonettacarsonelli
      @simonettacarsonelli Před 3 lety +1

      @Chance Cox Typical response. Not real to you, others have belief. So who's the poor one.

    • @GiasJulii
      @GiasJulii Před 3 lety +1

      @Chance Cox No you believe he is not real, if you know show the proof, or you are no different from him and just going on your beliefs. Personally I believe in a Great Creator, I just do not think you will find him in any of the three Abrahamic religions. Saying that again its my belief, nothing I can prove to you or anyone else nor do I think you can prove he doesn't.

    • @vascobroma8907
      @vascobroma8907 Před 3 lety

      @Chance Cox funny that atheists often refer to their stance as inherently rational (as opposed to belief in the supernatural being inherently irrational) when they routinely utter logical blunders such as this.

  • @reseviladik
    @reseviladik Před 2 lety

    omg how did they knew that! amazing

  • @markphillips4600
    @markphillips4600 Před 3 lety +1

    There’s one peace of the puzzle that helped in the destruction of the Dinosaurs that know one has covered yet , as far as I know , with the cold ocean water that was vaporised on impact steaming in the atmosphere , the cold ocean water would be getting super heated trying to rush back in over the molten rock causing hurricanes far bigger than we today have ever seen , hurricanes would continue to form until the molten rock had cooled down . The biggest hurricanes we get today measure category 5 , the categories back then could have been category 8 to 10 maybe even higher and going off in all directions for weeks , nothing would survive no matter how big things are

  • @ortherner
    @ortherner Před 3 lety +1

    1:21 is what you came here for.

  • @mikeweber6605
    @mikeweber6605 Před 3 lety

    Just how hard is it to enable auto generated captions?

  • @DaveDott
    @DaveDott Před 2 lety +1

    I remember like 15 years ago watching a show on Discovery Channel where some guy with a gun like this shot a grain of sand at a block of ice at a kabillion mph and I've searched all of CZcams trying to find it but to no avail anyone remember that?

    • @karlkarlsson9126
      @karlkarlsson9126 Před 2 lety

      Was is that video where she got stock in the washing machine and then step-bro came and asked if she needed help?

    • @DaveDott
      @DaveDott Před 2 lety +1

      @@karlkarlsson9126 no, it was the one where her dog got loose and her uncle found it the next day in a parking lot at a Speedway gas station

    • @karlkarlsson9126
      @karlkarlsson9126 Před 2 lety +1

      @@DaveDott Actually, I remember the video you are talking about, but I don't think we can find it now.

  • @richwall6304
    @richwall6304 Před 3 lety +3

    The area under chixulub was mainly gypsum (calcium sulphate). They reckon the impact released unimaginable quantities of sulphur dioxide into the atmosphere, acidifying it and causing climate breakdown.

  • @fabianernestopacheco
    @fabianernestopacheco Před 3 lety +11

    I don't think that the impact of an asteroid like the one in the Gulf of Mexico has wiped out all the dinosaurs but I do think that it could have triggered a chain reaction of many volcanoes, the dinosaurs dying from suffocation and heat, is what can be seen according to the position of the fossilized skeletons.

    • @Krishnaprasad-tc6vk
      @Krishnaprasad-tc6vk Před 3 lety +7

      The impact alone could take out many Marian lives but at the same time the energy from the impact could have caused a series of chain reactions that lead to the mass extinction. I think the impact along with magnitude 13 earthquake is very much enough to wake up each and every volcanoes from their nap. Tsunamis, landslides and the increasing temperature... One followed by the other.
      It's clear that life of land was literally unimaginable but I have one question... What about life on water? Acid rain? But is it enough to pollute the whole sea and wipe out everything in water

    • @trvth1s
      @trvth1s Před 3 lety +9

      @@Krishnaprasad-tc6vk None of those killed all non avian dinosaurs, but they did lead to global darkness due to all the debris. This global darkness lasted an estimated 10 years, causing vegetation and phytoplankton to collapse.
      What this means is ALL VEGERATION AND PLANKTON [the base of the foodweb] died globally for 10 years.

      Mass starvation killed every warm blooded animal bigger than a rat.
      Warm blooded animals like dinosaurs need a lot of calories to survive. Almost all mammals and birds also died. Neornithine birds were the only dinosaurs that survived sadly.

    • @eggrollsoup
      @eggrollsoup Před 2 lety +1

      @@trvth1s you’re underestimating the immediate damage the seething hot ejecta had globally. locally around the americas, the thermal radiation and airblast would have wiped clean the land of life.

    • @alextrabal6500
      @alextrabal6500 Před 2 lety +1

      You do realize that the sky is pretty much fully covered with ash from the impact right? This results in the sun being blocked, decreasing temperatures over-time amongst other crazy shit. No photosynthesis for plantlife. Suffocation and heat from the initial impact vaporizes pretty much anything in its path and don´t forget about the pressure wave annilihating everything within the first few minutes/hours.

  • @cmhavner
    @cmhavner Před 3 lety

    His eyebrows are an impact event in and of themselves

  • @antoniotrew8131
    @antoniotrew8131 Před 3 lety +1

    There are too many variables to lead to an absolute understanding, trajectory and impact speed is just a couple of those...

  • @Trey4x4
    @Trey4x4 Před 3 lety

    We need Destin to meet this man

  • @ZombieSlayer-dj3wb
    @ZombieSlayer-dj3wb Před 2 lety

    Seems like people forget about sulfur deposts

  • @corruption781
    @corruption781 Před 3 lety +4

    Tsunamis,heat wave,wind, and thats why dinos died

    • @NickManJams
      @NickManJams Před 3 lety +2

      Earthquakes, widespread eruptions, molten ejecta, a decade of significant global cooling, etc.
      The impact could have its own "1000 Ways to Die" book.

    • @trvth1s
      @trvth1s Před 3 lety +1

      None of those killed all non avian dinosaurs, but they did lead to global darkness due to all the debris. This global darkness lasted an estimated 10 years, causing vegetation and phytoplankton to collapse.
      What this means is ALL VEGERATION AND PLANKTON [the base of the foodweb] died globally for 10 years.
      Mass starvation killed every warm blooded animal bigger than a rat.
      Warm blooded animals like dinosaurs need a lot of calories to survive.

    • @larrydaniels6532
      @larrydaniels6532 Před 2 lety

      @@trvth1s The kinetic energy this asteroid possessed was of a mind-blowing nature, hard for a human to comprehend! The amount of molten ejecta that rained down on every part of the globe caused every combustible item to ignite, the entire atmosphere was as hot as a blast furnace. Every land-based animal would perish within 12 hours of the impact along with the majority of plant life.

  • @1rudrakshsharma
    @1rudrakshsharma Před 3 lety

    True

  • @miningflame9847
    @miningflame9847 Před 3 lety

    No one:
    Discovery channel after midnight:

  • @kshgarg1
    @kshgarg1 Před 3 lety

    zone of death and destruction - wow what a scientific insight.

    • @larrydaniels6532
      @larrydaniels6532 Před 2 lety

      Especially, since it is inaccurate. The entire globe was a zone of death and destruction, Dinosaurs and every other land-based animal would have died within 12 hours after impact.

  • @thevampirates2310
    @thevampirates2310 Před 3 lety

    the second one looks like a Kamahameha haha

  • @btqy
    @btqy Před 3 lety +1

    An ASTROID is a particular mathematical curve: a hypocycloid with four cusps.
    COME ON DISCOVERY ASTEROID.

  • @cortster12
    @cortster12 Před 3 lety +2

    The narration is weird, as the dude says 'at an angle' is unusual, yet most asteroids hit at an angle.

    • @NorthForkFisherman
      @NorthForkFisherman Před 3 lety

      Yup. There are a lot more angles than 90 degrees.

    • @timbrowder2059
      @timbrowder2059 Před 3 lety

      Like they know anything .

    • @generalyellor2187
      @generalyellor2187 Před 3 lety

      @@timbrowder2059 You're an idiot. But what kind of science is your doctoral degree in, genius?

  • @David-uj2ms
    @David-uj2ms Před 3 lety

    Peter's eyebrows, though!

  • @robertmedina3982
    @robertmedina3982 Před 2 lety

    The guy was puzzled that the asteroid was at a low angle like it was man made to begin with.

  • @dave929
    @dave929 Před 3 lety

    Plus, the atmosphere kept most of the dust and such trapped and it spread out around the planet and such. Too bad we don’t have ‘eye-witnesses.

  • @DarthAverage
    @DarthAverage Před 2 lety

    I have a hard time taking a video about the Chicxulub impact seriously when the OP cannot even spell "ASTEROID" correctly in the video's title....

  • @gregozymandias3799
    @gregozymandias3799 Před 3 lety +4

    Didn't it strike the earth in an angle of 60° ?

  • @geometricart7851
    @geometricart7851 Před 3 lety +2

    Wonder if the gravitational density is different in that area and could be measured by satellite. Because most areas of that size would be pretty homogeneous rock density wise. An explosion of that magnitude would distort and congeal all sorts of rocks of different densities together like a bowl of Chex Mix.

  • @gastonpossel
    @gastonpossel Před 2 lety

    NASA Scientist needs a model of the Earth: proceeds to make a flat disc XD
    (it's a joke, don't take it seriously)

  • @hetecks1385
    @hetecks1385 Před 2 lety

    Now thinking about it
    There will to be some prehistoric fish swimming around there, minding its business, then this asteroid frickin struck at it.

  • @Elaphe472
    @Elaphe472 Před 2 lety +1

    Regarding editing, since a while there is a tendency to create a "dynamic" view of short-lasting shots, with zoom, fast panning and flipping takes, with the intention to "grab and hold" the attention of the viewer. This doesn't give the chance to appreciate what we see, and in my case, gives a headache.

  • @croakingfrog3173
    @croakingfrog3173 Před 3 lety

    Cheesy editing but good information from Doctor Schultz

  • @frankdawe5156
    @frankdawe5156 Před 2 lety

    He needed a $100 000 airgun to emulate what common sense could explain!

  • @thechubster3423
    @thechubster3423 Před 3 lety

    recreating the astroid strike by making an astroid hit earth

  • @allizan
    @allizan Před 3 lety

    This, but to classical jazz music.

  • @jp8950
    @jp8950 Před 3 lety +1

    Everyone knows the Annunaki killed the the dinosaurs.

  • @sinOsiris
    @sinOsiris Před 2 lety

    i see life extinguished
    evolution realized if life to continue.... dang stuck getting breakfast soon.... later

  • @manifestgtr
    @manifestgtr Před rokem

    I want a custom built gun to simulate impacts : (

  • @leafsfanforever2896
    @leafsfanforever2896 Před 3 lety

    When this gets recommended on CZcams...

    • @firemon_goap
      @firemon_goap Před 3 lety

      My god, I found you on CZcams, Discord my man!

  • @LaughLounge11
    @LaughLounge11 Před 3 lety +1

    we need an anti asteroid missile.

  • @danmanuevo4364
    @danmanuevo4364 Před 4 lety +5

    Accurate video

  • @S-I-T
    @S-I-T Před 3 lety +2

    Commentary by Troy McClure.

    • @larissamariamai
      @larissamariamai Před 3 lety

      You may remember him from movies as: "When dinosaurs get drunk" or "Man vs. Nature - The road to victory"

  • @KlanMcleod
    @KlanMcleod Před 3 lety +2

    I always think it was not only 1 asteroid, was a shower of them to hit earth at the same time

    • @gamertardguardian1299
      @gamertardguardian1299 Před 3 lety +1

      There was only 1 major impact I believe, im sure its a debatable subject. If it was a comet, like some scientists believe, then thousands of small meteors would shower the earth

  • @hlcepeda
    @hlcepeda Před 3 lety

    If nothing else, these type of experiments are invaluable in helping to anchor ballistic simulation program source codes.

  • @racostagonz64
    @racostagonz64 Před 3 lety

    Greenland asteroid impact

  • @venkateshpotter1685
    @venkateshpotter1685 Před 3 lety +1

    So there could be dinosaur remains in space somewhere traveling more than the speed of sound..?! 🙄

    • @alextrabal6500
      @alextrabal6500 Před 2 lety

      hahahaha probably!!! Back in the day they had an underground nuclear blast under a manhole. Some experts say that manhole went into space from the power of the blast. Can´t imagine what it would have done to other stuff but keep in mind the tremendous heat would have probably vaporized anything with flesh and bones.

  • @DoktrDub
    @DoktrDub Před 2 lety +4

    Burning forests all over north and South America... plumes of smoke and rocky ash that blanketed the earth from the sun for centuries or more.. the aftermath is the scariest event, not necessarily the huge impact

  • @liammarra4003
    @liammarra4003 Před 2 lety +1

    This really doesnt do this inpact justice. Upon impacting just the atmosphere first, the sound (ear drums annihilated, glass broken 3000 miles away) , the release of thermal radiation (instant igniting of clothing, flesh, oil), the preasure wave and velocity, brightness, all before even impacting the ground sea. After impact, the super heated ejecta thrown up into space, the super heating of the atmopshere causing instant forest fires hundreds-thousands of miles from ground zero, rather powerful storms/hurricanes due to the immense heating of the atmosphere and water upon the ejectas ballistic return to earth. Than the fires possibly put out as the preasure waves radiates out at hypersonic speed (closest to ground zero), and supersonic speeds further out leveling any man made structure, and the earthquakes...then much later on the tsunamic comes and drowns everything lmao. A true hell on earth for the area thousands of miles in diameter from where it impacted the crust. All of this happening within the first 20mins of the meteor penetrating the atmopshere.
    I love deep impact (Armageddon sucks) but golly its laughably unrealistic-more so than the average hollywood big budget boondoggle.
    Anyway, its truly hard to grasp the deveststion that would occur so quicky and over such a large area of the earth.

    • @vonarg
      @vonarg Před 2 lety

      The best reproduction that i found is this, and it's totally scary.
      czcams.com/video/aGy04ZgeYvw/video.html

    • @alextrabal6500
      @alextrabal6500 Před 2 lety

      dinosaurs didn´t have glass....

    • @larrydaniels6532
      @larrydaniels6532 Před 2 lety

      The test using aluminium shot at a speed far slower than the asteroid actually was traveling leaves a lot to be desired in terms of really capturing this event. The kinetic energy (of the asteroid) has been estimated to be equivalent to 1 trillion Tsar nuclear warheads, the world was on fire, the atmosphere, globally, would have been as hot as a blast furnace, all life died on that day, save the small burrowing animals and sea creatures.Plant life also suffered as 90% percent would be extinct after impact.

  • @Kong37BattleCats
    @Kong37BattleCats Před 29 dny

    3:48

  • @blablabla5026
    @blablabla5026 Před 2 lety

    Can an impact like that push earth out of its orbit?

  • @Allbbrz
    @Allbbrz Před 2 lety

    oh not that guy.... he's way too dramatic for this........

  • @ABD-xn6bt
    @ABD-xn6bt Před 3 lety +2

    1:54 But some dinausors live thouthands of miles away, on the other side of the planet, how the impact affect them ..
    Me: They died when they heard the news 😁

    • @Elaphe472
      @Elaphe472 Před 2 lety

      Please don't try to be a stand-up comic.

  • @dunruden9720
    @dunruden9720 Před 3 lety

    Very intelectal. Now spell asteroid!

    • @raijin1378
      @raijin1378 Před 3 lety

      Hem-or-rhoids the dinosaur killer coming to theaters near you 😎

    • @generalyellor2187
      @generalyellor2187 Před 3 lety +1

      Try spelling intellectual correctly.

  • @fordifly1368
    @fordifly1368 Před rokem

    Still doesn’t explain what they’re attempting to explain

  • @Regalert
    @Regalert Před 2 lety

    Bananas ate 1:18!

  • @daleboxsell2805
    @daleboxsell2805 Před 3 lety

    The asteroid that theoretically killed the dinosaurs.

  • @Olympian085
    @Olympian085 Před 3 lety

    Made the dinosaurs go extinct and no other animals...lmao

  • @alexILMN
    @alexILMN Před 3 lety

    In startalk Neil DeGrasse Tyson said that all craters are the same shape no matter the angle. Who should I believe?

    • @chad63
      @chad63 Před 3 lety

      right? maybe because this asteroid landed on a wet soil, the ocean? that's why its soft enough to be dragged to form an egg shape compared on the surface of the earth or moon

  • @rex69832
    @rex69832 Před 2 lety +2

    This was a 2015 video so they didn't know as much about the impact as we do today. The accepted theory today is that the Chicxulub asteroid hit the region at approx. a 30 degree angle.

  • @--8594
    @--8594 Před 3 lety

    They should have put water ngl

  • @innertubez
    @innertubez Před 2 lety

    12,000 mph is fast, but I just saw another videos saying the dinosaur asteroid hit the earth’s atmosphere going 60 times the speed of sound. Far, far faster.

    • @Phattyasmo
      @Phattyasmo Před 2 lety

      Yes, most asteroids are moving at very high speeds. This is just to recreate ejecta and see how it would look like/better understand such an event.

  • @sario5157
    @sario5157 Před 2 lety

    1 hundred million dollars of equipment to try and work out what happened a billion years ago... go figure??

    • @miguellopez3392
      @miguellopez3392 Před 2 lety

      You are going to need hundreds of billions in equipment for that.

  • @thunder7382
    @thunder7382 Před 2 lety

    end of the video..so is death and destruction.thank you..some news.

  • @vladimirolef1977
    @vladimirolef1977 Před 2 lety

    The real asteroid fell at the angle of 60 degrees, not 90

  • @jordanholman7822
    @jordanholman7822 Před 3 lety

    Read another story Elizabeth.

  • @emptyspacebluefireball

    Honestly the simulation looks more like what would happen if Ceres hit the earth.

    • @alextrabal6500
      @alextrabal6500 Před 2 lety

      lol what!?? Ceres is almost 1000 kms in diameter.

    • @emptyspacebluefireball
      @emptyspacebluefireball Před 2 lety

      @@alextrabal6500 the first simulation. I haven't seen this video in a while but if memory serves me right the first simulation was the rock plummeting straight down as opposed to the angle in the last simulation.

    • @alextrabal6500
      @alextrabal6500 Před 2 lety

      @@emptyspacebluefireball cant bé compared to Ceres though. This asteroid was only 12kms across. Ceres is like 80 times bigger than that.

    • @emptyspacebluefireball
      @emptyspacebluefireball Před 2 lety +2

      @@alextrabal6500 I see your point. If ceres hit the earth something similar to theia would happen.

    • @alextrabal6500
      @alextrabal6500 Před 2 lety +1

      @@emptyspacebluefireball Yes. But a muuuch larger scale because of the volume difference. It would bé insane.

  • @stephenbachman132
    @stephenbachman132 Před 2 lety +1

    Could of made the same experiment with a sling shot an a bucket of sand.
    How much did this ridiculous machine cost. Totally unnecessary.

    • @ChadwickTheChad
      @ChadwickTheChad Před 2 lety

      How much money did you invest in the project?

    • @stephenbachman132
      @stephenbachman132 Před 2 lety

      @@ChadwickTheChad $10 bucks on Jelly rubber. I cut a hole in a old container filled it with sand an shot a rock at it. Got the same exact result. Only my findings weren't super elobrate an expensive.

    • @ChadwickTheChad
      @ChadwickTheChad Před 2 lety

      @@stephenbachman132 No, I meant the actual project, the one you whined about.

    • @stephenbachman132
      @stephenbachman132 Před 2 lety

      @@ChadwickTheChad were is the delete function you use to be able to just straight up ignore talking to retards. Oh wait this thing is still on.

    • @miguellopez3392
      @miguellopez3392 Před 2 lety

      @@stephenbachman132 so how did your slingshot shoot it faster than sound?

  • @jonathanbrunner5202
    @jonathanbrunner5202 Před 2 lety +1

    I want to trim his eyebrows so bad!

  • @justincase4812
    @justincase4812 Před 3 lety +2

    Interesting science here, however the overzealous and overproduced theatrics from the TV production staff is beyond terrible.