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Asteroid buzzes Earth; meteor injured rises

Asteroid buzzes Earth; meteor injured rises

MOSCOW – The number of injured from a meteor that hit Russia’s Ural region Friday rose to over 1,000 even as an asteroid buzzed the Earth from the opposite direction.

The European Space Agency yesterday said its experts had determined there was no connection between the asteroid and the Russian meteor – just cosmic coincidence.

With a blinding flash and a booming shock wave, a meteor blazed across the western Siberian sky Friday and exploded with the force of 20 atomic bombs, blasting out windows and spreading panic in a city of one million.

Meanwhile, an asteroid hurtled through Earth’s backyard, coming within an incredible 17,150 miles (27,599 kilometers) and making the closest known flyby for a rock of its size.

“This is indeed very rare and it is historic,” said Jim Green, NASA’s director of planetary science, of the back-to-back events.

“These fireballs happen about once a day or so, but we just don’t see them because many of them fall over the ocean or in remote areas. This one was an exception.”

As the countdown for the asteroid’s close approach entered the final hours, NASA noted that the path of the meteor appeared to be quite different than that of the asteroid, making the two objects “completely unrelated.”

The meteor seemed to be traveling from north to south, while the asteroid passed from south to north – in the opposite direction.

Scientists the world over insisted the meteor had nothing to do with the asteroid. The asteroid is a much more immense object and delighted astronomers in Australia and elsewhere who watched it zip harmlessly through a clear night sky.

“It’s on its way out,” reported Paul Chodas of NASA’s Near-Earth Object program at Jet Propulsion Laboratory in California.

Asteroid 2012 DA14, as it’s called, came closer to Earth than many communication and weather satellites orbiting 22,300 miles (35,887 kilometers) up. Scientists insisted these, too, would be spared, and they were right.

The asteroid was too small to see with the naked eye even at its closest approach around 2:25 p.m. EST (2025 GMT), over the Indian Ocean near Sumatra.

The best viewing locations, with binoculars and telescopes, were in Asia, Australia and eastern Europe. Even there, all anyone could see was a pinpoint of light as the asteroid buzzed by at 17,400 mph (28,000 kph).

As asteroids go, this one is a shrimp. The one that wiped out the dinosaurs 65 million years ago was six miles across. But this rock could still do immense damage if it ever struck given its 143,000-ton heft, releasing the energy equivalent of 2.4 million tons of TNT and wiping out 750 square miles (1,942 square kilometers).

By comparison, NASA estimated that the meteor that exploded over Russia was much smaller – about 49 feet (15 meters) wide and 7,000 tons before it hit the atmosphere, or one-third the size of the passing asteroid.

Most of the solar system’s asteroids are situated in a belt between the orbits of Mars and Jupiter, and remain stable there for billions of years. Some occasionally pop out, though, into Earth’s neighborhood.

NASA scientists estimate that an object of this size makes a close approach like this every 40 years. The likelihood of a strike is every 1,200 years.

The flyby provides a rare learning opportunity for scientists eager to keep future asteroids at bay – and a prime-time advertisement for those anxious to step up preventive measures.

Friday’s meteor further strengthened the asteroid-alert message.

“We are in a shooting gallery and this is graphic evidence of it,” said former Apollo astronaut Rusty Schweickart, chairman emeritus of the B612 Foundation, committed to protecting Earth from dangerous asteroids.

Schweickart noted that 500,000 to one million sizable near-Earth objects – asteroids or comets – are out there. Yet less than one percent – fewer than 10,000 – have been inventoried.

Humanity has to do better, he said. The foundation is working to build and launch an infrared space telescope to find and track threatening asteroids.

If a killer asteroid was, indeed, incoming, a spacecraft could, in theory, be launched to nudge the asteroid out of Earth’s way, changing its speed and the point of intersection. A second spacecraft would make a slight alteration in the path of the asteroid and ensure it never intersects with the planet again, Schweickart said.

Asteroid DA14 – discovered by Spanish astronomers only in February last year – is “such a close call” that it is a “celestial torpedo across the bow of spaceship Earth,” Schweickart said in a phone interview Thursday.

NASA’s deep-space antenna in California’s Mojave Desert was ready to collect radar images, but not until eight hours after the closest approach given the United States’ poor positioning for the big event.

Meteor brings memories of Ames Astrobleme

Meteor brings memories of Ames Astrobleme

The damage stunned viewers but here in Oklahoma we’re no stranger to meteorites.

Seeing the red-hot meteor exploding over Russia leaves Harold Hamm wondering what Ames, Okla. look like when this Astrobleme site was created.

“It’s interesting to see and imagine what took place and what it must have been like,” Hamm said.

A meteorite hit Ames creating the crater 450 million years ago.

CEO of Continental Resources, Hamm, and his team of geologists found oil there in the 1990s, lots of it.

“Some things never change much,” he said. “You still have the natural forces of the world all around us.”

The Ames meteorite would dwarf the one in Russia.

Judging by the football field-sized hole it left, it was about 1,000 feet in diameter.

“They’re just nothing to mess with.”

In Russia, the sonic boom created by the meteor shattered windows and injured more than 500.

“To see a meteorite coming in and have it filmed and actually see the glow from it and see the explosion and the damage it created, you read about it study it but to see the video is phenomenal,” Jack Stark said, Senior Vice President-Exploration at Continental Resources.

Russia’s meteor is too small to create a crater that could hold oil in millions of years.

The Ames Astrobleme is a rare event but Hamm says it could happen again.

“The power of nature is tremendous and could one hit? Sure. It would be very disastrous if it did,” Hamm said.

For now, he just enjoys watching the fiery path of this meteor in awe of the spectacle from space.

If you want to know more about the Ames Astrobleme, drop into town.

Hamm built a small, fascinating museum about the ancient meteor that’s free and open to the public. (http://kfor.com)

Meteor BLAST injures over 1200 in Russia

Meteor BLAST injures over 1200 in Russia

Around 1,200 people, including more than 200 children, were injured Friday when a meteor weighing about 10 tonnes streaked across the sky above Russia's Ural Mountains, creating panic as shockwaves blasted windows and rocked buildings.

The meteor entered the Earth's atmosphere at a hypersonic speed of at least 54,000 kph and shattered into pieces about 30-50 kilometers above the ground, the Russian Academy of Sciences said in a statement.

According to officials, around 1,200 people have sought medical attention in the disaster area, 112 of whom have been hospitalised, with two of them reported to be in "grave" condition. Among the injured there over 200 children.

Most of those hurt suffered minor cuts and bruises but some received head injuries, Russian officials said.

Gas supplies were cut off to hundreds of homes in the Chelyabinsk region as a safety precaution and some 3,000 buildings were reported to have been damaged, Ria Novosti news agency quoted officials as saying.

A fireball was seen streaking through the clear morning sky above the city of Yekaterinburg, followed by loud bangs, but much of the impact was felt in the city of Chelyabinsk, some 200 km south of Yekaterinburg.

President Vladimir Putin said he thanked God no big fragments had fallen in populated areas.

Putin also promised "immediate" aid for people affected, saying kindergartens and schools had been damaged, and work disrupted at industrial enterprises.

Russian space agency Roskosmos has confirmed the object that crashed in the Chelyabinsk region is a meteorite. They said in a statement, "According to preliminary estimates, this space object is of non-technogenic origin and qualifies as a meteorite. It was moving at a low trajectory with a speed of about 30 km/second."

Asteroids are small bodies that orbit the Sun as the Earth does. Larger asteroids are called planetoids or minor planets and smaller ones are called meteoroids.

Russian Army units found three meteorite debris impact sites, two of which are in an area near Chebarkul Lake, west of Chelyabinsk. Police said an eight-meter wide crater had been discovered near the Chelyabinsk lake. The third site was found some 80 km further to the northwest, near the town of Zlatoust.

The meteor released several kilotons of energy above the region, the Russian science academy said. According to NASA, it was about 15 meters (49 feet) wide before it hit the atmosphere, about one-quarter the size of the passing asteroid.

The European Space Agency said there was no link between the meteorite and the 2012 DA14 asteroid which is due to pass close by the Earth later on Friday. NASA also said there was no connection because the asteriod and the "Russian meteorite" are on "very different paths."

Russian Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev, speaking at an economic forum going on in Siberia's Krasnoyarsk region, called the meteorite "a symbol of the forum."

"I hope that there will be no serious consequences, but it is a demonstration that it is not only the economy that is vulnerable, but our planet as well," he said.

Source: www.rediff.com

After dramatic meteor strike, Russians pick up pieces

After dramatic meteor strike, Russians pick up pieces


A small army of workers set to work Saturday to replace the estimated 200,000 square meters of windows shattered by the shock wave from a meteor that exploded over Russia's Chelyabinsk region.

The astonishing Friday morning event blew out windows in more than 4,000 buildings in the region, mostly in the capital city of the same name and injured some 1,200 people, largely with cuts from the flying glass.

Fifteen of the injured remained hospitalized on Saturday, one of them in a coma, the regional health ministry said, according to the Interfax news agency.

Regional governor Mikhail Yurevich on Saturday said damage from the high-altitude explosion — estimated to have the force of 20 atomic bombs — is estimated at 1 billion rubles ($33 million). He promised to have all the broken windows replaced within a week.

But that is a long wait in a frigid region. The midday temperature in Chelyabinsk was minus-12 C (10 F), and for many the immediate task was to put up plastic sheeting and boards on shattered residential windows.

More than 24,000 people, including volunteers, have mobilized in the region to cover windows, gather warm clothes and food and make other relief efforts, the regional governor's office said. Crews from glass companies in adjacent regions were being flown in.

In the town of Chebarkul, 50 miles west of Chelyabinsk city, divers explored the bottom of an ice-crusted lake looking for meteor fragments believed to have fallen there, leaving a 20-foot-wide hole. Emergency Ministry spokeswoman Irina Rossius told Russian news agencies the search hadn't found anything.

Police kept a small crowd of curious onlookers from venturing out onto the icy lake, where a tent was set up for the divers.

Many of them were still trying to process the memories of the strange day they'd lived through.

Valery Fomichov said he had been out for a run when the meteor streaked across the sky shortly after sunrise.

"I glanced up and saw a glowing dot in the west. And it got bigger and bigger, like a soccer ball, until it became blindingly white and I turned away," he said.

In a local church, clergyman Sexton Sergei sought to derive a larger lesson.

"Perhaps God was giving a kind of sign, so that people don't simply think about their own trifles on earth, but rather look to the heavens once in a while."

Source:www.cbsnews.com

Meteor shower explodes in central Russia and Urals injuring hundreds

Meteor shower explodes in central Russia and Urals injuring hundreds - At least 112 people have been seriously hurt among the 1100 injured, according to the Interior Ministry. About 200 children who had been at schools were among the hurt from flying glass and debris.

While NASA estimated the meteor was only about the size of a bus and weighed an estimated 7000 tons, the fireball it produced was dramatic.

The space agency estimates the blast over Chelyabinsk occurred at about 14-20 kilometers above the Earth's surface, and that the energy released was equivalent to a 300-kiloton explosion,

Video shot by startled residents of the city of Chelyabinsk showed its streaming contrails as it arced toward the horizon just after sunrise, looking like something from a world-ending science-fiction movie.

Some feared a plane was about to fall out of the sky while others thought the world was ending.

The terrifying sight was caught in a series of astonishing pictures by residents of central Russia as they headed to work on Friday.

Footage taken by dashcams – dashboard cameras common in the cars of Russians in case of accidents on winter roads or disputes with corrupt traffic police – mean the supersonic blaze has been captured, and shared with the world, in unprecedented detail.

Some believed the world was ending and video footage posted online showed screaming youngsters at a school where corridors were littered with broken glass.

Gulnara Dudka, a resident of Chelyabinsk, 1500km east of Moscow and the biggest city in the affected region, said: "I really thought it was doomsday."

Source: news.com.au

Xperia Z heading to Singapore on 1 March for S$ 988

Xperia Z heading to Singapore on 1 March

Xperia Z heading to Singapore on 1 March | Sony Mobile has confirmed launch details for the Xperia Z in the Singapore market this morning. The handset will launch in the Xperia Store, Sony Stores and Sony Centres on 1 March for a RRP of S$ 988 (off contract), it will then hit telco operators from 2 March. All three colours (black, purple and white) will be available, but the purple variant will arrive one week later.

Pre-orders open on 15 February at the above stores and all pre-orders will receive an “exclusive gift”, although we’re not sure what this may be. Online pre-orders can also be made at Starhub, SingtelShop and M1.

Xperia TL with Android 4.1.2 Jelly Bean

Xperia TL with Android 4.1.2 Jelly Bean - Yesterday we reported on Jelly Bean screenshots leaking for the Sony Xperia T (LT30p) and Xperia TL (LT30at). These are from a development version of the firmware so therefore it’s unlikely we’ll see it leak to allow people to download. If you want to know what improvements to expect, then you may want to check out the video below (in Vietnamese). It shows Android 4.1.2 Jelly Bean running on the Xperia TL (LT30at).

One of the big improvements is the new launcher (that was leaked yesterday). Apart from that, we noticed a new lock screen and some new software features from the Xperia V such as Superior Auto mode on the camera and ClearAudio+ mode for better audio quality. Obviously as the firmware is still in development, things may change before the final release, but it’s all shaping up nicely so far.
 
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