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by MauranKilom
1045 days ago
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Unless one in every 33 asteroids that have 3% impact probability at some point in time actually impacts earth, there is clearly some unwarranted assumption in the error bar/distribution calculation. "The measurement data has noise" does not explain why the noise has a bias towards "the asteroid will hit earth" whereas reality so far has been biased towards "the asteroid will not hit earth". (This assumes that significantly more than 33 asteroids have had >= 3% impact probability predicted at some point. The opposite would not be less concerning.) |
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So the best guess you have is that the true asteroid is 99% likely to be somewhere within a 2km box centered at the observation point.
For each possible location in this box you use it as a hypothetical starting point and run a simulation forward creating a trajectory. In 3% of these trajectories the asteroid hits the earth.
The 3% is only a probability over the measurement uncertainty. It represents our knowledge about the system in a bayesian sense. The true asteroid was always ever going to hit the earth or not. There is no uncertainty inherent in the system.
That many asteroids have non negligible probability only means the physics is sensitive to initial conditions or that the measurements are loose. (Both are true)