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Tesla Space Car To Crash On Earth
By: Tupaki Desk | 17 Feb 2018 11:34 AM GMTIt is known that Tesla Company owned by Elon Musk recently launched its maiden flight Falcon Heavy rocket into the Mars orbit last week. The space car which is named as Roadster, and a mannequin named Starman is riding the car. The Roadster is currently revolving around the sun in an elliptical orbit.
The latest reports suggest that Tesla Roadster is off the track and it is headed for a crash either on Earth or On Venus in a few million years. A team of researchers performed a series of computer simulations tracking the car's path through the next 3 million years. Their simulation modeling suggests that Roadster has 6% chance of crashing into the Earth in the next 1 million year and 2.5% chance of crashing into the Venus. They have also revealed that the human race may be extinct on the planet by the time space-car crashes into the Earth,
The researchers also revealed that the space car will closely pass by Earth in 2091 within a few hundred thousand kilometers distance from Earth. In a statement released by Hanno Rein, the director of University of Toronto said that "We are not able to tell on which planet it will ultimately end up but we are comfortable saying that it won't survive in space for more than a few tens of millions of years."
The latest reports suggest that Tesla Roadster is off the track and it is headed for a crash either on Earth or On Venus in a few million years. A team of researchers performed a series of computer simulations tracking the car's path through the next 3 million years. Their simulation modeling suggests that Roadster has 6% chance of crashing into the Earth in the next 1 million year and 2.5% chance of crashing into the Venus. They have also revealed that the human race may be extinct on the planet by the time space-car crashes into the Earth,
The researchers also revealed that the space car will closely pass by Earth in 2091 within a few hundred thousand kilometers distance from Earth. In a statement released by Hanno Rein, the director of University of Toronto said that "We are not able to tell on which planet it will ultimately end up but we are comfortable saying that it won't survive in space for more than a few tens of millions of years."