Two giant golden balls, dropped somewhere bellow the geosynchronous orbit might do the trick of a little orbiting around each other and then splashing into the ocean, one after another.
That might cause some damage, but the Earth would survive as a planet. Rather costly and not environment friendly solution.
Or two ordinary small balls, one dropped from just above the geosynchronous orbit, the second one from far above the orbit. While the first one slowly drifts away to the space, the second shoots away, makes a complete (retrograde) orbit around Sun and splashes into the Atlantic while the first ball is still drifting...
This is true, but those Moon or Sun solutions aren’t my favorite. Moon, Sun, Jupiter and so on are external agents I’ve forgotten to explicitly forbid. Next time, I’ll be even more careful when posting a problem. :-)
Two giant golden balls, dropped somewhere bellow the geosynchronous orbit might do the trick of a little orbiting around each other and then splashing into the ocean, one after another.
That might cause some damage, but the Earth would survive as a planet. Rather costly and not environment friendly solution.
What do you mean “costly”, we end up with two giant golden balls :-D
Or two ordinary small balls, one dropped from just above the geosynchronous orbit, the second one from far above the orbit. While the first one slowly drifts away to the space, the second shoots away, makes a complete (retrograde) orbit around Sun and splashes into the Atlantic while the first ball is still drifting...
Requires some careful timing, though.
This is true, but those Moon or Sun solutions aren’t my favorite. Moon, Sun, Jupiter and so on are external agents I’ve forgotten to explicitly forbid. Next time, I’ll be even more careful when posting a problem. :-)