Collision Earth

  • 2 months ago
Transcript
00:00Good afternoon here in the Cowboy State. We've got partly cloudy skies, clearing by sundown.
00:04And for you stargazers tonight, the Geminid Meteor Shower is set to put on a once-in-a-lifetime show between 6 p.m. and 2 a.m.
00:09So set your sights to the north, northeast, high in the sky.
00:12The National Weather Service says temps could dip into the mid-60s, so you have a beautiful night to sit out with a sweetheart, kick back, and put something on the grill.
00:18And here's a fun fact from Wyoming's Meteor Research Center at Hopkins Air Force Base.
00:21Only twice in the shower's history have we seen a shower lasting longer than two hours.
00:25And this one goes late, late into the night, so it sounds like it's going to be quite a show.
00:29Don't go to bed early.
00:30And I didn't know this, but our weather guy is saying to me that these falling stars are actually debris from an asteroid that orbits the sun every year and a half.
00:35It's named... how do you pronounce this?
00:37Uh, Phaethon.
00:38Phaethon, is that it?
00:39Sounds close enough.
00:40So we won't be able to see that tonight, but plenty of shooting stars will be dancing across the sky.
00:43Keep it cool, keep it fun, keep it safe.
00:45Definitely be ready for a fireworks display from Mother Nature to go with your rock and roll.
00:50Currently, 68 degrees and a jam-packed lineup at K5OS.
00:59What began as excitement has turned to concern in rural Wyoming this morning.
01:22Reports have been flooding in from NORAD and the International Space Station of some unusual activity related to a meteor shower mostly viewable in the northern U.S.
01:29Observatories around the world are coordinating efforts to ensure that the meteor that made ground late yesterday was one isolated incident.
01:35Mount Wilson Observatory in Southern California is closely monitoring a group of 58 meteors.
01:39They want to reassure the public that there is at this point no cause for alarm and that they're keeping a close eye on the shower as it identifies.
01:44Notch's Road. Notch's Road. Let me know when you see it.
01:46And reports here at KYOS Wyoming.
01:48Nexter Road on the right.
01:49Why do meteors always land in the middle of nowhere?
01:51I hate these country roads.
01:53I think we're here.
02:11Let's see what we got here, huh?
02:18Let's go say hi.
02:22How you doing, guys?
02:23Hello. Hi. Hi.
02:25Officer Bridget.
02:26Nice to meet you. Kurt.
02:27Yeah, at first I thought it was a jet from the Air Force Base that caught on fire, or maybe it was a missile that flew out of control.
02:31But until we got your call to shelter in place, this town was in a panic.
02:33Yeah, well, that's understandable. A meteor traveling ten times the speed of sound will frighten anybody.
02:39So are you the poor woman who just got her house destroyed?
02:41Yeah.
02:42Yeah, she was pretty shook up, but she keeps mentioning how happy she is that you guys are located just a couple miles up the road.
02:45Yeah, you're the folks that study the UFOs?
02:47No, we actually study meteors.
02:49Meredith, this is Dr. Kurt Siegel. He's from the base. He's their lead meteorologist.
02:52That's our weather, Brian.
02:53Actually, we're called Meteorists. Those weather people claim that cool name, unfortunately. So, here we are.
02:58Oh, yeah, I mean, this was my house. I just put in fresh juniper bushes. That explosion even fried my radio.
03:02So, do you mind if we go ahead and take a closer look at things?
03:05Yeah, feel free. It's a sad sight. Come on.
03:09All right, this way. Watch your step.
03:12We've just got to go around here. There's too much damage on the other side.
03:16All right, now watch your step here. It's kind of tricky.
03:19All right, so it came from right over here, it crashed the top of my house, and landed right over there.
03:27Go ahead.
03:30Here, watch yourself. Watch it.
03:32All right, watch your step.
03:36Watch yourself.
03:40Look at that.
03:42Well, this doesn't make sense.
03:44What?
03:45The size of it. It's way too big.
03:47Why? What'd you expect?
03:49About a fraction of this.
03:51That's about six foot.
03:55What do you think, Mara? If this was the size of an actual missile, what would it do?
04:00Well, it's definitely going to travel, what, 20,000, 30,000 miles an hour?
04:02That's right.
04:05Okay. Well, even without a payload, a small ICBM would generate the force equivalent to a ton of TNT.
04:11So, something this size?
04:14Speed?
04:17This whole town should be gone.
04:21Shit.
04:22How do you explain that, Doc?
04:24I'm not sure. The only plausible explanation is that this meteor was traveling at a much slower speed than it should have.
04:28We'll need a second opinion on this. I gotta make a call.
04:34Hey, Gwen, it's Siegel. Yes, I'm at the crash site.
04:37There are a few things that just don't add up here. I think we could really use your expertise.
04:41Oh, you're on your way? Good.
04:43Because I need you and Beth down here, stacked, to run some element profiles.
04:47I can't figure out for the life of me how this thing survived the atmosphere.
04:52Or if there'll be more.
04:54We're going to need to dig into this thing. I hope you have your field kit.
04:57Okay. See you in a minute.
04:59She asked if we could take the helicopter to save time, and I told her we're not breaking transport protocol ever again.
05:03Please don't tell me you taught her how to fly a helicopter.
05:06I had a heart attack when I found out you taught her how to fly a jet.
05:09Well, I wish I had a chauffeur to fly me around in a helicopter.
05:11Title's heavy weapons analyst, but yeah, I can get people where they need to go from time to time.
05:17Especially if they want to blow stuff up.
05:19My apologies.
05:21To be fair, I did teach Gwen the basics of flying an F-35.
05:23And I told her next time we're up, she can take the controls.
05:26Michael's coming with her?
05:27Michael? No, it's just her and Beth.
05:30They're here.
05:37Gwen, I understand your husband's a hotshot colonel now at the base.
05:40But we do still need you in the field from time to time.
05:42Sorry I'm late.
05:43But it was us today.
05:44Beth, good to see you.
05:45So, no, I'm late because I had to start the spectral imaging process.
05:46I told you that was unnecessary, Gwen.
05:47My predictive models call this a meteor shower.
05:49Yeah, well, we should talk about that.
05:51Yeah, we should. You gotta take a look at this.
05:52Okay.
05:57Kurt, did you happen to see all those dead birds in the drive-in this morning?
05:59Yeah, that's not uncommon in a meteor shower.
06:01Yeah, no, but it seemed different.
06:03Gwen, what is it?
06:06Beth, would you mind giving us a moment?
06:08Thanks.
06:10Kurt, I'm telling you, I'm concerned about this meteor cloud's density.
06:12With four objects aggregated from the center,
06:13it could indicate something much larger and more dangerous that's affecting them.
06:16Gwen, I understand you're being cautious because of Russia,
06:18but I ran a complete threat matrix and everything looked fine.
06:22You know, but what if we were wrong about Phaeton's disappearance in that solar storm?
06:24After that asteroid's last perihelion, it never came back out from behind the sun.
06:27That was the biggest solar shower in decades.
06:30Unless we just can't see it.
06:31We can't see it.
06:32Gwen.
06:34Beth.
06:41Gwen, come on. The parade is this way.
06:45Beth.
06:53So, Gwen, Beth, this is Brian.
06:55And the next one is Meredith.
06:59Hey, Brian, Meredith, this is our lead astrophysicist.
07:00Oh my God, Gwen Armstrong.
07:01I read all about you in Wired Magazine.
07:03Looks like you have a fan.
07:04Oh God, I'm so sorry about half of those poor people who got injured in slavery against Russia.
07:07Thank you.
07:08I've read every single one of your books.
07:09Seriously, when I saw what happened on TV after your prediction, I felt so sad, you know?
07:12They said that the U.S. got the coordinates completely wrong,
07:13and by the time they warned the Russians it was too late.
07:15Was that you? Were you the one who got the coordinates completely wrong?
07:18That was me.
07:22I'm sorry. Sorry that that happened.
07:24Thank you.
07:25Thank you for your kind words.
07:28Hey, Brian, Meredith, can I borrow you guys for a second?
07:30I want you to tell me all about what you saw when that meteor struck, yeah?
07:33Hey, Mary, why don't you go radio-based? I'll be here about another hour.
07:35Copy that.
07:40You okay?
07:42Yeah. I just want to get the sample.
07:47But if I'm being completely honest, this whole Russia thing is still haunting me.
07:53Sorry, I don't mean to dump all of this on you. I know you're here just to learn.
07:55Uh, Dr. Armstrong, I don't mean to overstep my bounds, but for what it's worth,
08:00your theories are taught all over the world.
08:02Your husband Michael just got promoted for helping redesign a nuclear launch system.
08:05Can't you get to work with him every day?
08:07If I even had a fraction of those things, I think my life is pretty incredible.
08:11Thank you for all of that.
08:14Okay, it's time to focus on the task at hand, huh?
08:17All right.
08:19So, I need you to put these on.
08:22And I need you to put these on.
08:24I want you to monitor the meteor cloud as I take the sample.
08:27I've never done this before.
08:29You said you want to work in this industry, right?
08:30Absolutely.
08:31Well, right now we need to make sure that this meteor shower isn't a meteor storm.
08:34Or something more dangerous.
08:36Okay. Put these on.
08:39I'll walk you through it.
08:41Okay. So the first setting is just a basic telescope that you look through the lens.
08:45The second rendering closes the aperture and gives you a real VR rendering from the Pentagon's database in real time.
08:50Here you go. Try that on.
08:53Oh, wow. This is incredible.
08:55It's like I'm standing above Earth's orbit.
08:57Yeah, pretty cool.
08:58And the third setting, it just freezes the frame and gives you an interactive model.
09:00But you don't need to worry about that right now.
09:02What I need from you is to tell me if you see meteor dust in the center of that meteor cloud,
09:05or if it's something solid, like an object.
09:07It's just, it kind of just looks like a blob.
09:09Like, it keeps shifting and changing around, but I can't really focus on it.
09:12Okay. Well, reach out your hand and pull up the menu bar on the right-hand side.
09:15Squeeze your wrist and open it up.
09:17Okay. And what is the density in the center of that meteor cloud?
09:20Um, six objects per square mile.
09:28Six?
09:29Yeah, it's a six.
09:33Do you remember how to do a process?
09:34Yeah, I can do that.
09:35Okay.
09:38Okay.
09:40Okay. Here you go.
09:46Hey, Gwen. What's the ETA on that sample?
09:48Uh, 30 seconds.
09:50Okay.
09:51I don't understand why he keeps rushing you.
09:53Maybe if he'd given you more time on your spectral imaging theory in Russia,
09:56all of those people wouldn't have gotten hurt.
09:58No. I had enough time.
10:00But your spectral imaging theory revolutionized the way we do things in the industry. I mean...
10:04Do you remember that asteroid that we found off the observatory in Hawaii?
10:06Yeah, it was 40,000 miles off of Earth.
10:08Mm-hmm. Well, we found it because of Kurt's algorithms.
10:11He's the best at projecting algorithms.
10:13What's that process say?
10:1459% iron and 31% silicates. Both iron and silicates are fully crystallized.
10:17Yeah, but what if Dr. Siegel ran his algorithm test on something better,
10:20something worthwhile like the Brayberg effect?
10:23I don't think that Anton Brayberg is someone that you should want to model your career after.
10:26He's kind of lacking stuff in the science community right now.
10:29Okay.
10:30Okay, what's the core temperature?
10:32Mm-hmm. 400 degrees.
10:35Are you sure?
10:36Yeah, it says 400.
10:43Okay, we've got to take another sample.
10:46Okay, bye-bye.
11:01Ah!
11:09Hey, Gwen, how are we coming on that sample?
11:11Uh, 30 seconds.
11:19What is that, Gwen?
11:20It's a composite drill. It's a combination of a diamond and a laser.
11:22It can cut through anything.
11:31We've got to get this back to base immediately.
11:37You okay?
11:38Yeah.
11:39Hey, guys!
11:40AMS, I just reported a meteor made groundfall 12 miles due south.
11:43We've got to go. Come on.
11:44We have to escape. Now. This is much worse than we thought.
11:46I'll check in with NWS.
12:00Whoa!
12:30No, no, no, no.
12:34Fine, fine, just get us out of here.
12:36Go, get us out of here.
12:37Where's Gwen? Where's Gwen?
12:41Gwen!
12:43Beth.
12:45Gwen!
12:46No.
12:47Come on!
12:48Okay.
13:01Come on.
13:13Come on.
13:19Come on.
13:20Where'd you get this car?
13:21I got killed by a meteorite.
13:22Go, go, go!
13:25No.
13:26Oh, no.
13:27No, no, no.
13:28It's not fair.
13:30Come on.
13:39Beth! Beth!
13:40The gun is back there. We have to go.
13:41The gun is gone, Gwen!
13:42Beth, it's gone. Look at her.
13:47There's no signal. There's no signal anywhere.
13:48Mara, what do you got? What do you know?
13:49The last update I got was one minute ago.
13:50Meteor strike. Outside of Dublin. This thing's global.
13:52Oh, my God.
13:57Do you have anything?
13:58No, the network's jammed.
14:01You know what? Let me try the satellite radio.
14:06Oh, my God. Reverse! Reverse! Go back! Go back!
14:11Go! Go back!
14:14Mara!
14:22Okay. That was close.
14:23Everybody take a breath. We're okay.
14:24We made it.
14:26Okay. You okay?
14:31Okay.
14:49Guys, the ground fall spans the entire hemisphere.
14:51There's no way the Pentagon got a full response. No way.
14:54They're definitely going to add a Level 5 nuke strike for good measure.
14:56Probably.
14:57If they've already launched Level 5, then we're too late.
14:59Because those meteors will detonate those nukes long before it'll reach the asteroid.
15:01And then we'll have nothing left to destroy it.
15:02What about NASA? JPL? GSS? They had to have seen something.
15:04No one can see it. It's hidden inside the meteor cloud.
15:06Remember? It's a needle in a haystack.
15:07I know.
15:08Okay. We just need to get there. We need to tell them to stop at Level 5.
15:10Stop at Level 5? They're not going to react to us.
15:11They're going to think we're giving them flawed data because of Russia.
15:13And if we need proof, we don't have it.
15:19So what are we going to do?
15:20I don't know, Mara. This contradicts my entire threat matrix.
15:22I'm at a loss. Gwen, help me out.
15:24Okay. First things first, okay?
15:25We have to make sure that they launch the EMOD, okay?
15:26The evacuations, the meteor shield, the ordnance, and the orbital drones, okay?
15:29And then, Kurt, you know what? I want you to take this.
15:30Flag the center of the mass in the meteor cloud.
15:31Got it.
15:32Target the APB and let all the departments know, okay?
15:34At least that will give them a fighting chance. At least a fighting...
15:35I got it. I got it.
15:36Okay? Good. Keep driving.
15:51At Level 5?
15:52As far as Level 5, Kurt's right.
15:54They're not going to delay a threat response.
15:55And if we want them to stop the launch, then the data needs to come from somebody else.
15:57Someone like Michael.
16:00He's now Lieutenant Colonel, and he's got nuclear defense clearances.
16:02Yeah, but even if order comes down from him, he still has to get vetted by Singh, who's at base.
16:05Yeah, and Singh's not stupid. He's going to know that order is coming from you, Gwen.
16:08Not if he breaks the chain of command.
16:09And go straight to the Pentagon, okay?
16:10There's no vetting, there's no agencies, there's no red tape.
16:13Michael's still blaming me for Russia, Gwen.
16:14He's going to take your breaking protocol to save time for some back intel I gave you.
16:17Look, we all know whose fault Russia was.
16:19It wasn't yours.
16:20I love him, but today he's just going to have to get over it.
16:22Yeah, well, what if Michael's not able to do it?
16:24Well, if he's not able to do it, then you know what?
16:26I'm just going to have to take this veteran green straight to the Colonel.
16:27Okay, straight to the command room.
16:28Right at the base.
16:29We have to stop this launch, okay?
16:30So just get us to the base and I'll get the proof.
16:32Yes, ma'am.
16:33We'll get you there.
16:46Michael?
16:47Gwen?
16:48There's a two-mile-wide asteroid hidden inside this meteor storm.
16:49We've got approximately two hours and 29 minutes until it hits.
16:51Any nuclear response needs to be saved to strike the asteroid.
16:53Gwen, you know I can't do that.
16:54Colonel Singh has to approve any protocol changes.
16:56I mean, I can flag incoming threats on the defense database system, but...
16:58We need a commanding officer to clear it.
17:00But none of the other agencies can see the asteroid.
17:02Michael, this is the worst-case scenario.
17:04The only reason I know it's there is because I was able to examine this morning's meteorite.
17:10What is that?
17:11Meteor debris.
17:12Shouldn't be that big.
17:13It is.
17:14Oh, my gosh.
17:15It's creating a dust cloud.
17:16Keep going.
17:17Keep driving.
17:18No, no, no, no, no, no, no, no.
17:19Damn it.
17:22Ugh!
17:23Are you okay?
17:24What's going on?
17:25Yeah, yeah, I'm okay.
17:26It's just that our vehicle stalled.
17:27Meteor debris choked out the engine.
17:28Oh, no.
17:29Damn it.
17:30Well, let's go fix it.
17:43Okay.
17:44What do you think it is?
17:47It's the Belcher.
17:48Belcher?
17:49Belcher?
17:52Quinn, you've got to get out of there right now.
17:54This meteor storm is escalating.
17:55The DoD has already approved a Level 5 launch, and there's going to be a meteor shower right in your area.
17:58Get out.
17:59Michael, listen to me.
18:00I can't stop this nuke strike, but you can.
18:02Defense protocols are cleared for Rank Lieutenant Colonel and above.
18:04Okay, call General Ambrose at the Pentagon and tell him it was you who personally identified this as an asteroid.
18:07We have to save the nukes for the asteroid.
18:09I'm not going to lie to a commanding officer.
18:10It isn't a lie.
18:12It's a mass inside a cloud that you or anyone can see easily on radar.
18:14It just hasn't been ID'd as an asteroid yet.
18:16The observatoriesies can't tell what it is, and the DoD isn't listening to me.
18:19Is this from some intel that Mara gave you?
18:20No, Michael.
18:21You can confirm it.
18:22Personally.
18:24It's as if you've captured the dimensions through spectral imaging, okay?
18:26You're asking me to stop a nuclear strike in mid-launch.
18:28I'm going to leave the whole planet vulnerable to a meteor storm.
18:30If they launch that strike, this storm will detonate every one of those nukes before it reaches the asteroid.
18:33Only use conventional weapons on the meteors.
18:35The drones have plasma cannons that can melt tanks.
18:37And the satellite missiles, well, they're bunker busters.
18:39And the meteor shield is woven, crystallized carbon.
18:41If the nukes strike in the upper atmosphere, we're talking fallout on a global scale.
18:44At its current heading, the nukes will strike it right outside the mesosphere.
18:46Fallout will be high enough, just like any other nuclear test.
18:48Quinn.
18:50I could go to prison for the rest of my life.
18:53We both could.
18:54There's no time. Break the chain of command, okay?
18:56You have to stop this launch.
18:57Michael, you have to believe me.
19:00What's our mark?
19:01Two hours, sixteen minutes.
19:02South, southwest.
19:03I love you.
19:05I love you.
19:10So, you're a mechanic. That's nice.
19:19Okay.
19:23I got it.
19:24Got it.
19:28Come on.
19:41This just in.
19:42The Geological Society of America is now weighing in on the growing threat of what is now being called a meteor storm.
19:47Reported gravitational anomalies and impact zones are stirring up geologic activity,
19:51including hot zones of volcanic activity in our national parks.
19:54Carbon dioxide, monoxide, and methane levels in the atmosphere are spiking nationwide.
19:58This is beginning to impact the wildlife in the area,
20:00with reported injuries and deaths being seen as far north as Canada.
20:03The Department of Defense is involved, as well as the UN and NATO,
20:05in preparation for a potential nuclear strike on the meteor storm.
20:08Stand by for further instructions from the emergency broadcast system.
20:11And in the meantime, please remain indoors.
20:14Wyoming, I just received a terminate signal from you.
20:16Hang on, I'm putting you on calm.
20:19There had better be a good reason for this.
20:21Sir, this is Lieutenant Colonel Michael Armstrong, sir.
20:23Under Colonel Singh in Wyoming.
20:24I have full confirmation of an incoming NEO backed by radar GSS.
20:27Incoming coordinates outlined by radar are as follows.
20:29That's ID number 3-2-0-0-5-a-thon.
20:32Sir, we need to stop Level 5 countdown immediately and retain as it defends against the asteroid.
20:37We did not copy, Lieutenant. Repeat, we did copy.
20:40I repeat, we have an incoming NEO. It will strike in T-minus 2 hours, 16 minutes, sir.
20:44We are aware of the meteor storm, Lieutenant. However, your alarm regards a global response.
20:48Is this signed off by Colonel Singh?
20:50Colonel Singh is responding directly to a situation in the field, sir.
20:52But I have direct orders from the Colonel to terminate Level 5, sir.
20:55Lieutenant, we have all EMODs active.
20:57Terminate Level 5, sir.
20:58We are confirmed on a meteor threat, Lieutenant.
21:00I repeat, abort Level 5, sir.
21:02Level 5 abort. Do you copy, General?
21:04We are initiating.
21:15Nice of you to join us, Lieutenant Armstrong.
21:17Apologies, sir. It won't happen again. Daniels, what's the status on the meteor shower?
21:20Incoming Vector 20 Delta 9-0-9, Kentucky.
21:24Incoming Vector 9-19 Epsilon 30, South Dakota.
21:28Washington confirms drones are in place. Meteor shield deployed.
21:30Orbital missiles engaged. Level 5 strike at T-minus 3 minutes.
21:35We have a terminate switch active on our global response, sir. Is this accurate?
21:39This phone's dead. Get me Ambrose on the line.
21:41Yes, sir.
21:45This is going to be a long day, Daniels.
21:51Armstrong, what's the status on that phone?
21:53IT's working on it, sir. We should be back up in a few minutes.
21:56We're still on track for launch. Nuclear response in T-minus 2 minutes and 30 seconds.
22:00Even if we can't get in touch with the Pentagon, we're following our last known orders.
22:02Daniels, check the transmission.
22:05Sir, we have a full-system crash in the western half of the U.S.
22:07Colonel, we just severed our apparatus to the Pentagon. Our missile systems for the whole region are failing.
22:11Sir, what did you do?
22:13Lieutenant Armstrong, step away from the communist arm now. Private Daniels, give the OD back on the line.
22:17Yes, sir.
22:18We're all on the same page. Do you have any information?
22:20Sir, we've been intercepted.
22:22Well, that's good.
22:23Sir, we've been intercepted.
22:24We've been intercepted.
22:26We've been intercepted.
22:28Sir, we've been intercepted.
22:29We've been intercepted.
22:30We've been intercepted.
22:31Sir, we've been intercepted.
22:33Private Daniels, get VOD back online to initiate the launch right now.
22:36Sir, all of our comms are down. Our landline and backup feed are down.
22:38Lieutenant-Colonel Armstrong crashed the system, sir.
22:40Subdue him now.
22:41Get the system back online. Daniels, give me communication to the Pentagon, now.
22:43It's our new guidance system, sir. Armstrong cut off half the country.
22:45And a meteor just struck our base and satellite dish, sir.
22:47Okay, repair the dish. I want to isolate that straight to our ground lines.
22:49You may have just killed millions of people.
22:51Stickman, hold him, or I'll kill him myself.
22:52Colonel, I had no choice but to cancel the level 5.
22:55You just shattered our defenses to a global threat.
22:56I confirm I'm going to call off a nuclear strike.
22:58I will skin him alive for this.
23:04Sir, EMOD live and engaging targets.
23:07All nuclear-capable countries have confirmed participation in level 5.
23:10Give me a level 5 mark.
23:19We are live. Targets engaged.
23:21Okay, give me a real-time kill ratio. Keep me appraised at level 5.
23:23Standing by for kill ratio. And level 5, standing by.
23:27Have we restored communication with the Pentagon?
23:29ETA 30 seconds, sir.
23:32EMOD kill ratio at 6% and climbing?
23:347%. 8%.
23:40Gwen, check with VR. See what's happening.
23:48Did the meteor shield deploy?
23:50Looks like we still have incoming meteors.
23:54Level 5 launch in. T-minus. 30. 29. 28. 27. 26. 25.
24:02Gwen, meteors are still coming through. What's going on out there?
24:07All batteries are deployed. Defense systems are firing, but that's not enough.
24:2218. 17. 16. 15. 14. 13. 12.
24:2716. 15. 14. 13. 12.
24:30Phalanx 1-4 down. Phalanx 8-12 down.
24:32Launch for Tongo. 90 degrees.
24:34Sir, nuclear assets in the entire western hemisphere are offline.
24:36It seems like they've been crashed from a program out of Wyoming.
24:38Do we have backup? Launch backup as soon as it's live.
24:44Gwen, what's the status on their response?
24:46Only 12% of the meteors have been destroyed.
24:48Still no sign of the nukes.
24:50Kyle.
24:55East Coast backup system is restored. T-minus zero. Launch.
24:58East Coast is go.
25:03Russia's go.
25:09India's go.
25:15U.S. arsenal 50%.
25:21No. No, no, no, no, no.
25:23What? What? What? What is it?
25:24The nukes. They've detonated the nukes.
25:26I have VR confirmation that they've launched from the East Coast,
25:28along with all the other nuclear countries.
25:30This is Dr. Armstrong. Come in.
25:35What's our percentage of airborne nuclear missiles?
25:3750%. All other countries have launched their full arsenal.
25:39Open to weapons?
25:40All ordnance and drones are completely destroyed.
25:42We've also lost 4 out of 20 of our communication satellites.
25:44The only thing we have left is the T-minus zero.
25:46All ordnance and drones are completely destroyed.
25:48We've also lost 4 out of 20 of our communication satellites.
25:50The only thing we have left is the shields, sir.
25:53Yeah.
25:54Michael, why did you let them launch the nukes?
25:55Dr. Armstrong, your husband has been arrested for a breach of national security.
25:58His attempt to take down the nuclear guidance system was stopped,
26:00but we were only able to fire half our payload.
26:01Colonel, sir, I assure you that Michael was just forwarding the...
26:03If you're involved in any way in any of this, you will never see the light of day again.
26:06Now return to base immediately and report to me in command.
26:13Michael's been arrested and Singh wants me to report to the command center as soon as we arrive.
26:15But you can't report to Singh.
26:16If he has you arrested, you're done. We're all done.
26:18Mara's absolutely right.
26:19I can run predictive algorithms all day long with spectral imaging.
26:21That is your area of expertise, but by the time I compile the data, it'll be too late.
26:24Here's what we're gonna do.
26:25As soon as we arrive to the security checkpoint, I want you to report your injuries.
26:27Under Code Blue, they cannot arrest any injured personnel.
26:28Right.
26:29They'll definitely have MPs looking for you all over the medical bay.
26:31I imagine they will.
26:32I'll find my way to the lab, okay?
26:33I'll get the proof and I'll meet Singh in the command center.
26:34You got it.
26:36Defense alarm.
26:38Okay, we got it.
26:40No. No, no.
26:46The strike is complete, sir.
26:47All nuclear weapons from all countries have detonated in orbit, sir.
26:49What's our kill percentage?
26:51Twenty-five percent, sir.
26:52What? That's not possible.
26:57Meteor shield's taking heavy fire, sir.
26:59Sir, the entire shield's coming apart.
27:01Bitch.
27:10Where is everybody?
27:11Why are there no guards?
27:12It's protocol to secure all personnel inside the facility.
27:14Looks like the cameras are down.
27:15Thanks, Michael.
27:17Code Blue, where's the OR?
27:18What happened?
27:19Please, I lost a lot of blood.
27:20How? What happened?
27:21I was hit by a meteor.
27:22Come on, we don't have time.
27:23Where do you need to go?
27:24OR.
27:25Come on.
27:26Code Orbs now in effect.
27:27All medical personnel, report to your designated emergency response location.
27:30I'm all right. I'm all right.
27:31Okay, I should have wrapped this up.
27:33You're all right.
27:34Yeah, I'm okay.
27:36Don't worry about me.
27:37Just give us a minute, please.
27:38Thank you.
27:40I'm fine. I'm fine.
27:41Just get the gloves. Wrap me up.
27:42We gotta go.
27:45Just grab anything.
27:49What's wrong with you?
27:50I'm fine.
27:51Laura, what happened?
27:52I'm fine.
27:53Hey, come here. You have to move me.
27:54Okay.
27:55Forward.
28:00Are you sure you're all right?
28:06Okay, sit down.
28:08I'm sorry.
28:09It's all right.
28:10It's all right. Just quick wrap. We gotta go.
28:11I know.
28:12It's all right.
28:15Are you sure you're all right?
28:17I'm fine.
28:19Hey, thank you.
28:21Yeah.
28:22We have to go talk to Colonel Singh.
28:26Are you okay?
28:28Yeah. Let's go see Singh.
28:42Okay.
28:44All right. Let's get going.
28:46Pop up.
28:48Where's the screen here?
28:50There.
28:51All right. So, that's good.
28:53And these coordinates...
28:5547...
28:589...
29:02Okay.
29:03This database...
29:05Around the meteor cloud, the density...
29:07600...
29:11Let's find you.
29:14Okay.
29:20Officer Pritchard, Dr. Siegel.
29:21Colonel Singh, sir.
29:22As soon as the storm passes,
29:23we will be disbanding your department.
29:26The incoming is so heavy,
29:27we can barely get a damage report from the field.
29:28Colonel, sir, Dr. Armstrong thought the threat was big enough.
29:30She doesn't give orders. I give orders.
29:31Where is Gwen Armstrong?
29:32Sir, she left as soon as we arrived.
29:33Well, she needs to be here at this comm
29:34to be questioned by me personally.
29:35People are dead and dying, Dr. Siegel.
29:37Sir.
29:38Officer Pritchard.
29:39Sir, I've been working in the field with Dr. Armstrong
29:40for over seven years now.
29:41And her input concerning this storm
29:42is critical to our survival.
29:44I'm aware of your work with Dr. Armstrong.
29:45Her husband hasn't been shy about
29:46reporting her failures in Russia.
29:59There you are.
30:01There you are.
30:03Yep.
30:04I knew it.
30:05Okay.
30:06Okay.
30:08Yep.
30:15You know what?
30:16Gwen Armstrong has been flagged
30:17as a national security risk,
30:18and I cannot have her wandering the space.
30:19Colonel, sir, you must let her
30:20complete her testing before you speak to her.
30:21Dr. Siegel, I respect you,
30:22and I'm trying to respect your team,
30:23but after the Russia incident
30:24and today's full-orbit defense,
30:25you are no longer cleared to advise the space.
30:27Are you with me?
30:32Where's the power reserve?
30:33The last impact carried an electromagnetic pulse.
30:34The reserve power's offline, sir.
30:35Engineering's en route right now to repair it.
30:36And the communications?
30:37Engineering's running a dedicated line
30:38to both the dish and the command center
30:39that goes all the way to D.C.
30:40Engineering's doing their best right now
30:41Sir, please.
30:42Detaining Gwen is a grave mistake.
30:43No one is more steeped in this research than she is.
30:44We are dealing with a global threat right now,
30:45not Gwen Armstrong's latest free association.
30:46Your team is relieved.
30:47It's an asteroid!
30:49I have proof.
30:50Undeniable proof.
30:51I just need a way for the information
30:52to come in to create a spectral image.
30:53There are over a hundred observatories.
30:54The observatories can't see it,
30:55and it won't show up on radar
30:56until it emerges out of the meteor cloud
30:57that it's covering,
30:58and then it's going to hit Earth.
30:59I don't see how a rainbow reflected back
31:00from a meteor cloud
31:01can create an image like this, Doctor.
31:04We kept picking up a dense section on our radar.
31:06Well, it failed to yield anything definitive,
31:07so we're going to have to go back
31:11and look at it again,
31:12but I knew that something
31:13was acting on those meteors,
31:14slowing them down,
31:15so I took a sustained spectrometer reading,
31:16and...
31:19There it is.
31:26So you're telling us
31:27this asteroid is cloaked
31:28by its own meteor shell?
31:29This is the sun, okay?
31:30During its last perihelion,
31:31Phaeton was knocked off of course,
31:33causing it to go back into the meteor trail.
31:35When it finally caught up with the meteors,
31:37it exerted its own gravitational force,
31:38causing the meteors to slow down
31:39and making them safe
31:40to enter into our own atmosphere,
31:41which is what's causing
31:42the meteor storm outside.
31:44So even if we were to destroy all the meteors,
31:46we still have a 2.6-mile asteroid to destroy.
31:48Where are the strike?
31:49It's difficult to say,
31:50which is why Dr. Segal
31:51has run a sequencing algorithm.
31:52Kurt?
31:53Its trajectory places it
31:54on the northernmost tip of Manitoba,
31:551,538 miles west of the bay.
31:57Fortunately, I was able to upload
31:58this vector to a priority list
31:59before the last power outage.
32:00It's far from a populated area.
32:01That doesn't matter, sir.
32:02The force will be equivalent
32:03to one million parachutists.
32:05So that's why you fought so hard
32:06to stop Level 5.
32:07Exactly.
32:08Now with what we have,
32:09we're going to have to do
32:10some surgical.
32:11All right.
32:12We have about 2,000 warheads left
32:13at 50 megatons each.
32:14That's 100,000 megatons
32:15or 50,000 per stage of attack.
32:16Good.
32:17So it hasn't reached
32:18a million megatons yet.
32:19We need to use
32:20half of our remaining nukes
32:21to dissipate the meteor cloud,
32:22then shoot the other half
32:23straight at the asteroid
32:24to destroy it.
32:26Sir, we're back online.
32:27All systems are active.
32:29Daniels,
32:30you need to get
32:31General Ambrose on the phone.
32:32Yes, sir.
32:33And you, go get your husband.
32:34Copy that.
32:39I'm on my way.
33:10Michael!
33:12What are you doing here?
33:14I'm so scared.
33:15I'm so afraid
33:16you got hurt up here.
33:17Is there any update?
33:18They need you in command.
33:19We've proven that
33:20there's an asteroid.
33:21Is Colonel Singh
33:22working with the Pentagon?
33:23He is.
33:24And he needs you.
33:25And me.
33:26The entire team.
33:27Let's go.
33:36Sir, we just received
33:37a priority alert
33:38on the data cloud.
33:39So has every other
33:40major observatory
33:41across three continents.
33:42Who's sending this out?
33:43NASA, JPL, ANS and FEMA
33:44just forwarded it
33:45to our base in Wyoming.
33:46It's a live vectoring model.
33:47What do the vectors target?
33:48We don't know, sir.
33:49It's a field, sir,
33:50with precise measurements.
33:512.18 miles.
33:521.31 miles.
33:532.62.
33:58Head Ambrose on the line, sir.
34:01General Ambrose.
34:02It's Colonel Singh.
34:03Wyoming.
34:04Our research team
34:05just confirmed
34:06a million megatons, sir.
34:07We have an Earth object
34:08with all intelligence
34:09of DOD's data.
34:13General,
34:14we're calling for a two-stage...
34:18General, we have to
34:19launch these missiles now.
34:20Phaeton's gravitation field
34:21is accelerating the meteor shower.
34:22It's only going to get worse.
34:23This whole place is going to blow.
34:29Sir, Wyoming's been hit.
34:30Without the orbital shield,
34:31Phaeton's projecting
34:32meteors straight at us.
34:33Do we have any communication?
34:34Sir, we have a signal,
34:35but it keeps cutting in and out.
34:36Colonel Singh wouldn't have called
34:37unless he was requested
34:38a severe response.
34:39Keep working to get the remaining
34:40of our nukes operable.
34:41Copy that, sir.
34:44All right, the main evacuation
34:45route is this way.
34:46Come on.
34:47We can't leave until we make sure
34:48that Ambrose has a proper information.
34:49We can't stay, Gwen.
34:50The base has been compromised.
34:51It's too dangerous.
34:52Come on.
34:53I need to see this through.
34:54Okay, I'm not leaving
34:55until I'm sure they're going
34:56to launch everything
34:57according to plan.
34:58Sir, come on.
34:59We have to evacuate
35:00to Washington now.
35:01Gwen, we need to leave now.
35:02Please.
35:03Yeah, yeah, okay.
35:04Where do we go?
35:05Okay, all right,
35:06we need to exit back
35:07through the command room.
35:08Come on.
35:15Are you okay?
35:16Yeah.
35:17Are you?
35:20Michael,
35:21where's the control room?
35:25Straight this way.
35:27All right,
35:28we'll go through the wall.
35:29We're not going through that wall.
35:33That's solid concrete,
35:34six inches thick.
35:35We'll cut straight through
35:36with this.
35:42Almost there.
35:45You through?
35:46Yep.
35:47Here goes nothing.
35:49Nice job.
35:58Come on.
36:01The roost collapsed here, too.
36:04We can get there
36:05through the annex bridge.
36:06Okay.
36:09This way.
36:18Wyoming, go for Ambrose.
36:19General,
36:20this is Gwen Armstrong.
36:21Do you have a confirmed target?
36:22It's an asteroid, sir,
36:23two square miles.
36:24I've sent you all the data.
36:25What is the ETA to impact?
36:26One hour, 15 minutes.
36:27The strike requires
36:28a two-step response,
36:2950% into the meteor cloud
36:30and 50% directly
36:31into the asteroid.
36:34Oh!
36:39Baby, are you okay?
36:40Yeah, are you?
36:41Yeah.
36:42Go, get to the exit.
36:43Come on, go.
36:44Go, go, go.
36:46Hold.
36:49Get to the exit.
36:50We got it.
36:51Come on, go.
36:52Just go.
36:53Go.
36:54Help the others.
36:55I'm right behind you.
36:56Gwen, come on, baby.
36:57Okay, we're coming.
37:00Come on.
37:04Gwen, come on.
37:06Hello.
37:12Here, take my hand.
37:15Not like that.
37:18Hello.
37:19No.
37:21I can lift you.
37:22I shouldn't listen to you.
37:23Please stop.
37:34All right, ladies and gentlemen.
37:35Our two-mile-wide field
37:36is an incoming asteroid.
37:37Sir, are we talking about
37:38the one that disappeared
37:39behind the sun, Phaeton?
37:40That's affirmative.
37:41We need to use
37:42the rest of our nukes
37:43on a stage-two,
37:44level-five response.
37:45We need to set
37:46our target system
37:47so that the first wave
37:48of nukes all hit
37:49the exact same spot
37:50of the meteor cloud.
37:51That'll create
37:52a compound wave
37:53to dissipate the cloud
37:54and reveal the bigger asteroids
37:55that we can see.
37:56We need to set
37:57our target system
37:58so that the first wave
37:59of nukes all hit
38:00the exact same spot
38:01of the meteor cloud.
38:02That'll create a compound wave
38:03to dissipate the cloud
38:04and reveal the bigger asteroids
38:05that we can target.
38:06That's brilliant, sir.
38:07This is Gwen Armstrong's plan,
38:08and yes, it is.
38:09Sir, we just lost
38:10two more communication satellites.
38:11But we do have communication
38:12with other surviving bases.
38:14Prepare for the first wave.
38:15Yes, sir.
38:16Stand by.
38:17Level five.
38:21Level five is go.
38:25Level five is go.
38:26Level 5 is go.
38:3350% response, go!
38:57Heat signature at 4%, 2%.
38:59Sir, it's working. The cloud's beginning to dissipate.
39:02Heat signature, 1%.
39:07Level 5, stage 2.
39:09Target that asteroid.
39:1050%, go!
39:21The asteroid is still intact. The nukes were ineffective, sir.
39:23They were unable to make contact with the target.
39:24Dammit!
39:26Impact estimated in 38 minutes.
39:28Make sure the President, Congress, and Joint Chiefs of Staff are evacuated to the Doomsday Bunker.
39:31Yes, sir.
39:35We are now being informed that the mission to destroy the incoming asteroid was unsuccessful.
39:38A general evacuation order has been issued for the entire east coast of the United States.
39:42We've also received word that the President's motorcade is being redirected to the Raven Rock Bunker in Pennsylvania.
39:46God help us all.
39:47Gwen! Gwen!
39:48Go! We have to go!
39:49No! We're not having another Russia incident!
39:51Michael, with all due respect, you were not there.
39:52She did what she was supposed to be doing.
39:53Did she?
39:54She had 15 minutes before that order came in to ground those planes!
39:56Gwen! Are you okay?
39:58I gave her the orders, Michael.
39:59It was my fault, okay?
40:01We were supposed to meet Kurt in Russia.
40:02I'm the one that told her to stay behind.
40:03It was my fault, Michael.
40:05She stayed because of me.
40:07Well, they didn't have to pin the whole thing on you.
40:10Okay!
40:11How much time do we have left, Gwen?
40:13We have 34 minutes.
40:14And we already launched phase 1 and phase 2 of the nukes, right?
40:17So what's plan B, guys?
40:18Plan B is we make our way to the airfield about a mile from here.
40:20Now there's two birds on the ground.
40:21We eave back to safety.
40:22No, no, no.
40:23We're not going to evacuate yet.
40:24Look, there could be a solution here.
40:25It's a long shot, but it could work.
40:27The Braeberg effect.
40:28Braeberg?
40:29Come on, Gwen. Enough with that.
40:30You know he's a laughingstock of our community.
40:31Kurt, listen to me, okay?
40:32So the last few hours, I've been noticing that all this meteor impact
40:34has displaced methane into the atmosphere.
40:36When you add an electrical force to methane, it turns into plasma vapor.
40:38Now, the test that I took this morning of that meteor,
40:40it proves that it has magnetic force.
40:41So if we somehow find 6,000 megawatts of electricity
40:44and create an electrical arc up into the atmosphere,
40:46it could actually displace that electromagnetic force.
40:48And if it's in the nukes, the meteors and the asteroid
40:49are all crashing together.
40:50Yes, and destroy them.
40:51Okay, I understand that.
40:52But where are we going to get that power, that wattage?
40:54We don't have that.
40:55There's a power plant not far from the airfield.
40:57Can we use that?
40:58Yes, but we would need some sort of...
40:59A massive controlled explosion.
41:00Exactly.
41:01One of those F-35s has to be stocked with missiles.
41:02Okay, okay.
41:03Let's go to the hangar. Let's go, let's go.
41:04Let's go to the airfield.
41:08Come on.
41:09Let's go. Come on, come on.
41:14For those of you at home or hopefully having found shelter,
41:16we have an update from Pentagon officials.
41:18Raging fires are widespread throughout North America
41:20as a result of the massive meteor shower.
41:22Hundreds of thousands of homes have been damaged or destroyed,
41:25and injuries and deaths are estimated to be in the hundreds.
41:28The National Weather Service is now reporting that this storm
41:30is due to a gravitational slowdown from inside of the meteor cloud
41:33caused by the two-mile-wide Pentagon asteroid,
41:35which is due to impact here within the hour.
41:38Come on, guys, come on. Come on.
41:40Let's go. Come on, let's go, let's go, let's go.
41:42Come on, move it, move it, move it. Let's go, come on.
41:49Oh!
42:14Come on.
42:18Come on.
42:36Okay, I can see it.
42:37Another 300 yards and we're there. Let's go.
42:39Come on, move, move, move. Keep moving. Keep moving.
42:48Down, down, down, down.
42:52Are you okay?
42:53Yeah, it's okay.
42:54Okay, okay.
42:55Mara, you scour this field.
42:57Find that jet.
42:58Let's just pray that puppy is armed with striking capabilities.
43:00Yeah.
43:01Right now, this incoming we're experiencing,
43:02I can only imagine it's going to get worse.
43:03So, Kurt, you go with her.
43:04You ensure her success, okay?
43:05Okay. Copy that.
43:06All right.
43:07Quinn and I are going to locate a power source.
43:08The transformer's on the other side of the airfield, due west.
43:10Okay, perfect.
43:11Meet back here.
43:14Okay, go, go, go!
43:19Shit.
43:24Quinn, come on!
43:28Okay, go, go, go, go, go!
43:33Okay, okay.
43:36Quinn, come on!
43:40There it is.
43:41I see it. Let's go. Let's go.
43:42Let's go.
43:43Come on.
43:51Okay.
43:52Hand me the iPad, Quinn.
43:53All right.
43:56You okay?
43:57Yeah.
43:58Okay.
43:59Hold it.
44:00Okay.
44:01You got it?
44:02Yeah.
44:03Okay.
44:04No.
44:05Okay.
44:08Please make this fast, okay?
44:09I'm trying, I'm trying, I'm trying.
44:10We're in.
44:11Okay.
44:12My security clearance should give me access to the main grid.
44:14Okay.
44:15I'm redirecting all kilowatts within a hundred-mile radius
44:16to transformer 47.
44:18Okay, 47.
44:19Where are those coordinates, Michael?
44:20Give me a minute.
44:30Are you okay?
44:31You having fun yet, Doc?
44:32I am.
44:33You're crazy.
44:34Come on. Come on, Mark.
44:35Come on, Mark.
44:36We're almost there.
44:37Come on.
44:42You're okay.
44:43You're okay.
44:44Hang on.
44:45Let's go.
44:54Got it.
44:55Send it to you now.
44:56Okay.
44:57Right.
44:58Plugging those in.
44:59The equation.
45:00Let's see if this works.
45:04So with that frequency, those coordinates,
45:07that dimension, at that speed.
45:10What do you got, baby?
45:11Michael.
45:12It's gonna work.
45:15Come on.
45:16Come on.
45:17We gotta go.
45:25You're gonna have to taxi this jet.
45:27Yeah.
45:28Lose the chauffeur now.
45:34Mara.
45:36There's no missiles.
45:38There's no missiles.
45:42I'm gonna go tell him.
45:43I'm gonna go tell him.
45:48Come on.
45:50Mara.
45:52Okay.
45:53After he got into the tarmac,
45:5410% fuel.
45:55It's okay.
45:56When?
45:57There's no missiles.
45:59That's it.
46:00What?
46:01It's over.
46:02There's nothing we can do.
46:04There's gonna be...
46:05Okay.
46:06There's nothing we can do.
46:07The jet becomes the missiles.
46:09I take it off.
46:10The jet becomes the missile.
46:11I just take off
46:12and fly straight up into the air
46:13and come down at Mach speed
46:14to that electrical plant
46:15and hit it right in the center.
46:16What are you talking about?
46:17No one's getting inside that jet.
46:18That's a suicide mission.
46:19And you know what?
46:20There's gotta be another way.
46:21Go figure it out.
46:22You're not thinking straight.
46:23No one's getting into that jet.
46:24It's over.
46:25It's over.
46:26Just get me into the SATCOM.
46:27I'll figure it out.
46:28Just hook me back up with the next one.
46:29You can do that, right?
46:34There we go.
46:35Fuel's at 10%.
46:37When?
46:38When?
46:39When?
46:40Michael, stop!
46:41She's gone!
46:42Best bet is to eject her
46:43to an open field.
46:44Okay.
46:45We gotta get to an open field.
46:46We gotta get to an open field.
46:47Come on, let's go.
46:48Let's go find an open field.
46:49Go, go, go.
46:53Initiate flight sequencing on.
46:55Engaged.
46:56Engine one on.
46:58Flight time, three minutes.
47:04Right gear.
47:07Okay, come here.
47:08You gotta land here, okay?
47:09This is the only spot that she can land.
47:14Gwen, do you copy?
47:15I read you.
47:16Five by five, Michael.
47:18Engine engaged.
47:38Damn.
47:58Sir, our radar is detecting
47:59an object moving the speed of sound
48:01flying up out of Wyoming.
48:02Do we have an I.D. on it?
48:03No, we don't know what it is yet, sir.
48:08Starting ascent.
48:15Gwyn, come in, Gwyn, come in, come in.
48:35Looks like it's one of ours, sir. An F-35.
48:41One minute, three seconds.
48:45T-minus one minute. Engaging F-35 dive in five, four, three, two, one. Now!
48:54One minute, three seconds.
48:58T-minus one minute. Engaging F-35 dive in five, four, three, two, one. Now!
49:06Gwyn, you get out of there. You make sure you get out of there, Gwyn.
49:11Gwyn, do you copy? Make sure you get out of there.
49:13Come on, Gwyn.
49:14Forty-five seconds.
49:20I'm getting high-level radiation warnings.
49:33Really starting to feel the G's here.
49:36Adjusting in ten, nine, eight, seven, six, five, four, three,
49:49two, one.
49:55Gwyn, do you copy?
50:20Gwyn!
50:33They did it!
50:36The target. The target has been neutralized.
50:38You heard correctly, ladies and gentlemen. The asteroid has been destroyed.
50:42We're clear. We're all clear.
50:47Lieutenant Armstrong, we can't confirm. Payton has been eliminated. Is your wife all right?
50:50Where is she? Where is she?
50:52Gwyn.
50:53Lieutenant Armstrong, do you copy?
50:55Where is she?
50:57General, this is Dr. Siegel. No sign of her yet.
51:00Where is she?
51:07Elle!
51:11We have a visual of Dr. Armstrong! She's alive!
51:14She's coming in for a landing!
51:43There you go.
51:54You're crazy.
51:56I got you.
51:59What was the probability of that happening?
52:01We didn't.
52:02You're crazy.
52:03I'm crazy.
52:07You did it.
52:09Dr. Brinkberry.
52:11The world doesn't need to know.
52:12The world needs to know.
52:13No, no, no. No.
52:14The world is safe now.
52:23Kurt!
52:29What a team.
52:30Well done, girl.
52:32Sir?
52:33Yeah.
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