Meteorite Bowling 51
La Camiseta writes "According to this article from the Guardian Unlimited Observer, some members of the Salt Lake Astronomical Society want to drop bowling balls from airplanes onto the Utah salt flats to simulate meteorites falling. Unfortunately, it's hit a few snags."
Alternative funding: RIAA (Score:4, Funny)
Of course, it wouldn't really be in space. But who trusts newspaper headlines anyway?
Stupid! (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Stupid! (Score:3, Funny)
Well, that shouldn't be a problem... a 4,000 mile-per-hour bowling ball probably wouldn't have any problem plowing straight through any snags that got in the way.
They wanna drop what?! (Score:4, Funny)
On the other hand, I suppose if they get a little bit of english on the ball....
Re:They wanna drop what?! (Score:5, Insightful)
A bowling ball, on the other hand, though it could maybe technically be affected by the bernoulli effect (ping pong balls are, after all...), has a much smaller surface area to weight ratio.
Daniel
Re:They wanna drop what?! (Score:1)
A bowling ball doesnt seem like all that great of a simulation, though i can see how it would be usefull. All the meteorites ive seen have had very irregular surfaces, wouldnt that affect the way it flies through the air? And think of all the complicated fluid dynamics stuff you would have to deal with if you wanted to simulate a meteorite that was melted during entry into the atmosphere.
Re:They wanna drop what?! (Score:1, Informative)
Bernoulli not (Score:3, Informative)
The big deal with the Norden bombsight [centennialofflight.gov] was its oversold ability to compensate for airspeed (the inital velocity and vector of the bomb) and wind speed/direction after the bomb was released. The same would be true of the bowling ball. I'd think the meteor would have a higher terminal velocity -- some of them are basically chunks of metal.
Incidentally, the Bernoulli effect is only a percentage of a wing's lift. I figured out recently that the textbooks make this hard to understand by always depicting the airfoil at a zero angle of attack, at which few planes could stay aloft. Military jets and aerobatic planes and paper airplanes don't rely on it as much, and most planes can fly upside-down provided the gas and oil keep flowing....
Re:They wanna drop what?! (Score:1)
Maybe change "Lies to children" to "Lies to people who haven't studied Fluid Dynamics to grad level"
Daniel
Re:They wanna drop what?! (Score:1)
Re:They wanna drop what?! (Score:2)
When I was young... (Score:2, Funny)
That would make for some interesting meteorites no?
Daniel
Re:When I was young... (Score:2, Interesting)
Simulations Gone Awry (Score:3, Interesting)
Sounds like a group of crackpots to me - not that there's anything wrong with crackpots mind you. There has to be someone around to go wild about free energy theories and such. Just wait until one of them is right. (Little do we know, many have already been right, but they've been carted off to the island)
Re:Simulations Gone Awry (Score:4, Funny)
Like we say in Nevada, better a few snags than a few hags.
They need to talk to someone with experience... (Score:3, Funny)
INCOMMING!!!! (Score:3, Funny)
It's been done (Score:3, Funny)
'Released high in the atmosphere, the balls would reach the same velocity as a meteorite. Then we would discover if they bounced off, punched through or exploded,'
I went to college with a guy who tried a similar experiment with a bowling ball and my dorm. Oddly enough, he was the one that was bounced.
Wiggins! (Score:2, Funny)
All I could think of after reading the article was Chief Wiggins and Ralph dropping heavy things out of an airplane.
"Dropping things is fun, huh daddy?"
Re:Wiggins! (Score:3, Informative)
Wiggum* (Score:3, Funny)
Famous Last Words: (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Famous Last Words: (Score:2, Funny)
I laughed my ass of first time I saw it. Still stings every time though, you just know that he hasn't got a non-fractured bone left in the foot!
hitting a few snags... (Score:4, Funny)
Well, that shouldn't be a problem... a 4,000 mile-per-hour bowling ball probably wouldn't have any problem plowing straight through any snags that got in the way.
Re:hitting a few snags... (Score:2)
Well, that shouldn't be a problem... a 4,000 mile-per-hour bowling ball probably wouldn't have any problem plowing straight through any snags that got in the way.
Oh, maybe they mean unfortunate for the snags....
Why the hell not? (Score:3, Interesting)
It's a chance to for the practical study of impact physics and craters. Actually, the scientist in me wants to know what happens if they dropped a much larger rock or boulder (several tons) from a high-altitude plane. The energies involved would be much more interesting than the 20-lb objects they've been talking about.
Of course they're going to take precautions and make sure that nobody gets killed by falling rocks - but the public gut reaction is often to treat such quirky experiments as acts of insanity or vandalism.
On a lighter note, I'm actually suprised the military has never (to my knowledge?) investigated the "dropping rocks out of airplanes" destructive technology.
Re:Why the hell not? (Score:1)
And what, exactly, do you think the "xyz pound gravity bombs" they used in Afghanistan are? Slightly more efficient than a rock, but the idea is the same.
Gravity Bomb is explosive. (Score:1)
A Gravity bomb is explosive delivered to the destination by gravity, it is not inert metal that damages things solely by landing on them.
Gravity bombs make a big boom.
What about shooting them? (Score:3, Insightful)
Couldn't you just fly a lot lower an shoot things, like maybe start with potatos [slashdot.org]?
Re:What about shooting them? (Score:2)
If you shoot the thing at 300m/s (around mach 1 which is quite high for a bowling ball
If you simply drop it, the gravitatioal potential energy is mgh (where m=mass of the thing , h=height and g=gravitational acceleration). Thus in order to get the same effect, you write
h=.5v^2/g which leads to h=4500m.
The real computation is a bit more complicated since you add the resistance of the air, which is a function of both altitude (air pressure) and speed.
BTW: am I the only one thinking of a 2-ounce squirrel carrying a 1 pound coconut ?
Duh. (Score:3, Funny)
Who doesn't?
Why an airplane anyway ? (Score:2, Informative)
Calculate the altitude that a bowling ball will reach terminal velocity, add 100 ft. or so, then just launch it that high using a trebuchette (better than a PC), a rocket, or something like that. I would guess that it would only take 100-200 ft to reach terminal velocity anyway, so what do you need the airplane and the extra altitude for
Terminal Velocity (Score:3, Insightful)
This "experiment" has no bearing the behavior of meteors. Sounds like these guys should go review basic physics before they propose dangerous experiments.
but they slow down (Score:3, Informative)
Re:but they slow down (Score:2)
Bowling balls are only "small" if you're above them looking down. LOL
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Re:but they slow down (Score:1)
Well... (Score:4, Funny)
I'll bet the council that makes the decision will have a 7-10 split as to wether or not this should be allowed to happen. Those turkeys.
Well just mod me -7 pun.
Re:Well... (Score:2)
Re:Well... (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Well... (Score:1)
Everyone does. (Score:2)
God, I wish I had this guy's job.
Hot air balloons/helicopters (Score:2)
Compared to planes it should be easier to find the stuff, plus you can do more controllable tests.
Re:Hot air balloons/helicopters (Score:2)
But you can get more bowling balls in the back of, say, a Hercules. I have this vision now of a Herkybird doing that insane shove-the-food-parcels-out-the-back manoeuvre - only with bowling balls. That's a whole lotta bowling balls.
Science be damned, this is fun. Anyone sponsor me for a C-130 type rating? Anyone?