Asteroid Castalia Impact Simulation

  • Released Thursday, January 21, 1999
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This visualization shows Castalia, a larger-than-average asteroid, being hit by a house-sized rock traveling at 5 kilometers per second. Lasting merely a second, the collision approximates the force of the Hiroshima atomic bomb. Using nuclear weapons has been proposed for breaking up, or at least diverting, asteroids headed towards Earth. Simulations show that such an impact will fracture a solid asteroid, but, later, gravity will reassemble the pieces.

Video slate image reads, "Asteroid Castalia Impact SimulationThis visualization shows Castalia being hit by a house-sized rock traveling at 5 km per second (11,000 miles per hour). Fractures appear throughout the asteroid, with the greatest damage shown in red. The scattering white dots are fragments from the smaller rock.  The simulation shows that such an impact will fracture a solid asteroid, but, later, gravity will reassemble the pieces."

Video slate image reads, "Asteroid Castalia Impact Simulation
This visualization shows Castalia being hit by a house-sized rock traveling at 5 km per second (11,000 miles per hour). Fractures appear throughout the asteroid, with the greatest damage shown in red. The scattering white dots are fragments from the smaller rock. The simulation shows that such an impact will fracture a solid asteroid, but, later, gravity will reassemble the pieces."



Credits

Please give credit for this item to:
NASA/Jet Propulsion Laboratory

Release date

This page was originally published on Thursday, January 21, 1999.
This page was last updated on Wednesday, May 3, 2023 at 1:59 PM EDT.


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