Depending on how close it is. If it's too close to earth, much of it would be captured by earth's gravity.weaponepsilon wrote:I think that the debris field would be fairly scattered enough so that only a small percentage would actually enter our atmosphere. Of course this is all dependent on the mass of the object. There are meteor showers pretty often and so far, I am able to go out and mow the lawn without a pressure suit. People tend to forget that an explosion sends debris across a 360 field and certain dynamics would surely send most of it back into space.
Btw, Carl Sagan's Pale Blue Dot ftw. Cosmos always managed to humble me.


