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Would ET's risk navigating the Oort Cloud to visit Earth?

Posted on 7/27/15 at 11:16 pm
Posted by LSU1NSEC
Member since Sep 2007
17243 posts
Posted on 7/27/15 at 11:16 pm
Travelling at 1/10th the speed of light it might take up to 30 years just to navigate thru this thing. Seems like it would be a major pain in the butt and very time consuming.


quote:

The Oort cloud is thought to occupy a vast space from somewhere between 2,000 and 5,000 AU (0.03 and 0.08 ly)[10] to as far as 50,000 AU (0.79 ly)[3] from the Sun. Some estimates place the outer edge at between 100,000 and 200,000 AU (1.58 and 3.16 light years).[10]


quote:

The outer Oort cloud may have trillions of objects larger than 1 km (0.62 mi),[3] and billions with absolute magnitudes[15] brighter than 11 (corresponding to approximately 20-kilometre (12 mi) diameter),


quote:

Models predict that the inner cloud should have tens or hundreds of times as many cometary nuclei as the outer halo;





Posted by Tunasntigers92
The Boot
Member since Sep 2014
23658 posts
Posted on 7/27/15 at 11:18 pm to
Yeah, probably.
Posted by soccerfüt
Location: A Series of Tubes
Member since May 2013
65540 posts
Posted on 7/27/15 at 11:20 pm to
He'd prolly just phone home and they'd come get him.
Posted by jaTigerfan
Nashville
Member since Oct 2011
2091 posts
Posted on 7/27/15 at 11:20 pm to
Well, it's safe to assume the ET's home star would have its own Oort cloud, so if they can get through that, I'm sure ours wouldn't be any different.
Posted by JuiceTerry
Roond the Scheme
Member since Apr 2013
40868 posts
Posted on 7/27/15 at 11:21 pm to
They wormhole right through that shite.
Posted by ThePoo
Work
Member since Jan 2007
60578 posts
Posted on 7/27/15 at 11:22 pm to
I would assume they would be travelling closer to 99percebt the speed of life if not infinitely fast if they had a warp drive or perhaps a worm hole or instantaneous travel

I also assume if they did they would have some sort of shield or deterrent field to take care of this if their means of travel didn't already solve the problem itself
Posted by BigAppleTiger
New York City
Member since Dec 2008
10376 posts
Posted on 7/27/15 at 11:26 pm to
Deflector array much brah?
Posted by biglego
Ask your mom where I been
Member since Nov 2007
76220 posts
Posted on 7/27/15 at 11:33 pm to
quote:


They cornhole right through that shite.



Posted by OMLandshark
Member since Apr 2009
108098 posts
Posted on 7/27/15 at 11:41 pm to
quote:

Travelling at 1/10th the speed of light it might take up to 30 years just to navigate thru this thing. Seems like it would be a major pain in the butt and very time consuming.



It would be simple to navigate it, because a kilometer isn't jack shite when it comes to the Oort cloud. It's like asking will I directly hit a Humpback Whale when crossing over the Pacific. Sure, you may come close to one, but the chances of you directly hitting one are slim to none. In fact, I'd say it's even more preposterous than that. The cosmos is simply massive, and the asteroid belt is much more densely packed than the Oort Cloud is, and none of our probes have gotten even close to hitting an asteroid. It's really 99.9999999999999999999999999999% space compared to that remaining minuscule portion that isn't. You in all likelihood wouldn't hit any other object.
This post was edited on 7/27/15 at 11:57 pm
Posted by Nuts4LSU
Washington, DC
Member since Oct 2003
25468 posts
Posted on 7/27/15 at 11:45 pm to
quote:

Would ET's risk navigating the Oort Cloud to visit Earth? by LSU1NSEC


Even with those big numbers you cite, the vastness of the space they are in is so much greater that the chance of actually impacting something, even if you went through it blind, would be very low. With advanced detection techniques that could tell them where objects were, they could go through it at full speed with no problem.
Posted by Manzielathon
Death Valley
Member since Sep 2013
8951 posts
Posted on 7/27/15 at 11:46 pm to
This.

We talked about this a couple of times in my Astronomy classes at A&M.

The sheer vastness of spaces makes navigating through it more than probable, assuming we had the right technology.
Posted by CGSC Lobotomy
Member since Sep 2011
79992 posts
Posted on 7/28/15 at 1:32 am to
They'd just come through the Stargate.
Posted by cubsfan5150
Member since Nov 2007
15756 posts
Posted on 7/28/15 at 4:41 am to
So you just read about this and had to post about it, cool.
Posted by Upperdecker
St. George, LA
Member since Nov 2014
30551 posts
Posted on 7/28/15 at 4:55 am to
Which would mean ET is old and therefore not an alien child, but a mentally retarded alien
Posted by dyslexic
Left field
Member since Nov 2010
6490 posts
Posted on 7/28/15 at 5:00 am to
quote:

the Oort Cloud



Is that by K-PAX?
Posted by geauxnavybeatbama
Member since Jul 2013
25134 posts
Posted on 7/28/15 at 5:04 am to
Was ET the retard of the group?
Posted by foshizzle
Washington DC metro
Member since Mar 2008
40599 posts
Posted on 7/28/15 at 5:21 am to
As others have pointed out, the risk posed by accidental collision is extremely low.

The real reason ET won't come here is that we'd steal all their blue-skinned females.
Posted by rantfan
new iberia la
Member since Nov 2012
14110 posts
Posted on 7/28/15 at 5:40 am to
It's almost as a obstacle was put there to discourage our comings and goings
Posted by jeffsdad
Member since Mar 2007
21379 posts
Posted on 7/28/15 at 6:04 am to
You anti-earthite! OUR oort is the biggest! by far!
Posted by drewnbrla
The Pool is closed.
Member since Mar 2011
7839 posts
Posted on 7/28/15 at 6:45 am to
Real space ballers use wormholes. Only space poor travel through the Oort Cloud.
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