Comment Re:how they did it (Score 1) 352
They made some assumptions out of necessity, but some of them are questionable. Since one of the shuttles lands on a field of "iron ferrite", they assume the entire asteroid is iron, with a density 7000 kg/m^3. However, it is implied in the movie that landing at that spot was particularly bad luck since there were other landing spots that weren't iron plates. The actual bulk density of most asteroids is between 1000 and 3000 kg/m^3.
http://www.lpi.usra.edu/books/AsteroidsIII/pdf/3022.pdf
Furthermore, "the size of Texas" was assumed to mean a sphere 1000km across. Saying a sphere is the same size as a two-dimensional object is meaningless, so it's tough to say how big the asteroid was meant to be. If we were trying to make the plotline work, we might say that the asteroid had the same surface area as Texas. That means a sphere with diameter ~300km, or a misshapen object (like most asteroids are) of significantly less mass than a 300km sphere.
Not to diminish the value of this project for teaching physics, but in about 15 minutes of Googling I reduced their "9 orders of magnitude" claim to 7 orders of magnitude, even less if you take the low estimates on both density and diameter.
Next step in making the plotline work (but it would require actual thought, so I'll leave it as an exercise for the reader) is to see if the movie indicates the asteroid is headed right at the center of Earth. If not, perhaps it would be necessary to split the asteroid into two equal hemispheres, but instead to push most of the asteroid off in the short direction, and a smaller piece of asteroid at a higher velocity in the opposite direction. Not sure how much that reduces the required kinetic energy (if at all), though.