this post was submitted on 31 Mar 2025
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...can something (naturally occurring) that small really be that dense?
EDIT: I calculated for ONE baby elephant and forgot it was supposed to be THREE!! lol it's even more implausible. fixed
no, a naturally occuring asteroid could not be that dense. According to the given "units" the asteroid would be over 30 times heavier than the densest stable element.
using some quick values from a search engine: a 12 oz beverage can holds 355 mL, I'll round up to 360 mL.
thanks to AI slop & the internet being shitty now it's harder to find a good baby elephant weight (almost like it's a shit unit!). I'm going to go with 220 pounds. 220 pounds = 100 kg
so the density is 300/360 or 0.833 kg/mL, or 833g/cm^3^
osmium is the densest stable element at 23 g/cm^3^
That's a pretty dense asteroid