How large would a moon impact event have to be to affect the Earth?

AI Thread Summary
A significant impact event on the Moon that could affect Earth's ecosystem would require an asteroid or comet weighing around 10^18 kg, with a radius of 70-90 km. Such an impact could alter the Moon's orbital velocity by 1%, potentially disrupting tidal forces and flooding low-lying areas on Earth. The energy released from this impact would be immense, approximately 10^25 joules, equivalent to 12 million gigatons of TNT, far exceeding the largest recorded earthquake energy release. While dust from the Moon might burn up in Earth's atmosphere without major consequences, the real concern lies in the potential for orbital changes. Overall, the catastrophic effects on the Moon would pose a significant threat to Earth’s stability.
Skoll
Messages
1
Reaction score
0
How big would an asteroid/comet have to be to impact the moon enough to have a significant effect on the Earth's ecosystem? Dust, tidal forces, etc.

Thanks,

-Mike
 
Astronomy news on Phys.org
Hiya Mike. Define "significant effect on the Earth's ecosystem".

Humankind cannot agree on whether global warming is an issue that has a significant effect - heck, we all can't agree on the phrase "significant effect".

If dust were to fall from the Moon to the Earth, it would mainly burn up in the atmosphere. This has probably happens to the Earth every once in a while without us knowing. Of course, if dust obscured the moon so we couldn't see it anymore, we would all go crazy and torch the townsfolk. See Nightfall by Asimov.

A more significant concern would be a change in tidal forces, which could flood low-lying populated areas. This calculation is beyond my expertise.

Cheers,
--Jake
 
I agree with gtring that the most worrisome thing would be the impact throwing off the orbit of the moon, thereby affecting tides and such.

I did a quick calculation and in order for a direct hit to effect a change of 1% in the orbital velocity of the moon (about 1m/s), the asteroid would have to be on the order of 10^18 kg, which corresponds to a radius of around 70-90km. For reference, the average radius of Ceres is about 450km. So, this would have to be one of the larger objects in our solar system.

Looking at this, the impact would release about 10^25J of energy, or about 10^16 tons of TNT. We're looking at about 12 million gigatons of TNT here, and the largest recorded energy release for an earthquake on Earth was 60,000 gigatons of TNT. This makes me think that orbital perturbation isn't the biggest worry here. This kind of damage would likely be catastrophic for the moon.
 
Is a homemade radio telescope realistic? There seems to be a confluence of multiple technologies that makes the situation better than when I was a wee lad: software-defined radio (SDR), the easy availability of satellite dishes, surveillance drives, and fast CPUs. Let's take a step back - it is trivial to see the sun in radio. An old analog TV, a set of "rabbit ears" antenna, and you're good to go. Point the antenna at the sun (i.e. the ears are perpendicular to it) and there is...
This thread is dedicated to the beauty and awesomeness of our Universe. If you feel like it, please share video clips and photos (or nice animations) of space and objects in space in this thread. Your posts, clips and photos may by all means include scientific information; that does not make it less beautiful to me (n.b. the posts must of course comply with the PF guidelines, i.e. regarding science, only mainstream science is allowed, fringe/pseudoscience is not allowed). n.b. I start this...
Back
Top