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  <title>Mistakes in Impact</title>
  <description>The top mistakes in Impact</description>
  <link>http://www.moviemistakes.com/film8090</link>
  <language>en</language>
  <pubDate>Sat, 21 Nov 2009 06:55:39 +0000</pubDate>
    <item>
	<title>Mistake #1</title>
	<mistake_id>150528</mistake_id>
      <description>The Moon is struck by a &quot;brown dwarf fragment&quot; having twice the mass of the Earth, which isn't noticed by anyone on Earth until a few minutes before impact. But an object of this mass would have profound effects on Earth's tides; its effects would have been equal to those of the Moon from the time that the object was within 2 million km of the Earth, over five times the Earth-Moon distance. (At astronomical speeds, this would provide nearly a full day's warning.) Such anomalies would not have gone unreported; they would be of universal interest to the scientific community. And because the planet's tides are highly predictable and heavily monitored, anomalies worthy of scientific examination would have occurred when the object was further still.</description>
    </item>
    <item>
	<title>Mistake #2</title>
	<mistake_id>150622</mistake_id>
      <description>The Moon is pushed into a &quot;more elliptical&quot; orbit. When the orbit it shown, it is more eccentric than the Moon's real orbit. However, it is centered directly on the Earth. This violates Kepler's first law of motion, which states that a natural satellite has the primary body at one focus of an elliptical orbit. In other words, the Moon should come much closer to the Earth at one ellipse, and recede very far from it at the other end, rather than receding to the same distance in both directions.</description>
    </item>
    <item>
	<title>Mistake #3</title>
	<mistake_id>150624</mistake_id>
      <description>Almost immediately after the brown dwarf fragment embeds itself in the Moon, the Moon moves 30 million km closer to the Earth. The brown dwarf fragment is said to have twice the mass of Earth. The result is that tidal forces due to the Earth-Moon interaction would be 200 times greater than our real tidal forces. This would cause widespread flooding as massive tidal surges affected coastal areas, an effect not seen in the film.</description>
    </item>
    <item>
	<title>Mistake #4</title>
	<mistake_id>150626</mistake_id>
      <description>A graduate student states that a frog was levitated by using a magnetic field to &quot;manipulate gravity,&quot; and a college professor, presented as an expert on the topic, agrees. It's true that a frog was levitated via a magnetic field, but the field was used to produce a diamagnetic force on the frog greater than the force of gravity. Gravity itself was not affected in any way. A layperson could make this mistake, but not anyone with a basic understanding of electromagnetism.</description>
    </item>
    <item>
	<title>Mistake #5</title>
	<mistake_id>150627</mistake_id>
      <description>It is stated that, due to the Moon's increased mass, the astronauts will weigh twice as much there as they do on the Earth. The Moon's new mass is twice that of the Earth, but the Moon's diameter remains one-fourth that of the Earth. Since gravity varies inversely with the square of distance, the astronauts would actually weigh closer to 32 times their Earth weights, which would likely be prohibitive for the mission.</description>
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