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Record meteorite hit Norway (caught on camera too)
Aftenposten (Norway) ^
| 06/09/2006
| Nina Lødemel/Jonathan Tisdall
Posted on 06/09/2006 8:47:00 AM PDT by mwilli20
As Wednesday morning dawned, northern Norway was hit with an impact comparable to the atomic bomb used on Hiroshima. ...
At around 2:05 a.m. on Wednesday, residents of the northern part of Troms and the western areas of Finnmark could clearly see a ball of fire taking several seconds to travel across the sky. ...
"I saw a brilliant flash of light in the sky, and this became a light with a tail of smoke," Bruvold told Aftenposten.no. He photographed the object and then continued to tend to his animals when he heard an enormous crash.
"I heard the bang seven minutes later. It sounded like when you set off a solid charge of dynamite a kilometer (0.62 miles) away," Bruvold said. ...
If the meteorite was as large as it seems to have been, we can compare it to the Hiroshima bomb. Of course the meteorite is not radioactive, but in explosive force we may be able to compare it to the (atomic) bomb," Røed Ødegaard said.
(Excerpt) Read more at aftenposten.no ...
TOPICS: Extended News; Miscellaneous
KEYWORDS: artbell; callingartbell; cometp73; endoftheworld; fragments; meteorite; norway
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To: 1FreeAmerican
OOOooo.. hadn't heard that one,, Methane gas, That was one helluva pocket..
61
posted on
06/09/2006 9:34:41 AM PDT
by
NormsRevenge
(Semper Fi - "The Road to Peace in the Middle East runs thru Damascus.")
To: mwilli20
"In the early darkness of April 23, as Washington was beginning to
relax after the spy plane crisis in China, alarm bells began to go off
on the military system that monitors the globe for nuclear blasts.
Orbiting satellites that keep watch for nuclear attack had detected a
blinding flash of light over the Pacific several hundred miles southwest of
Los Angeles. On the ground, shock waves were strong enough to register
halfway around the world. Tension reignited until the Pentagon could
reassure official Washington that the flash was not a nuclear blast. It
was a speeding meteoroid from outer space that had crashed into the
earth's atmosphere, where it exploded in an intense fireball. [...]
Preliminary estimates, Dr. ReVelle said, are that the cosmic intruder was
the third largest since the Pentagon began making global satellite
observations a quarter century ago. Its explosion in the atmosphere
had nearly the force of the atomic bomb dropped on Hiroshima."
--William J. Broad, The New York Times, 29 May 2001
62
posted on
06/09/2006 9:36:32 AM PDT
by
DBrow
To: thoughtomator
More like 60 miles if you figure sound traveling 1 mile per 7 seconds.
63
posted on
06/09/2006 9:36:35 AM PDT
by
DaGman
To: Robert A. Cook, PE
7 seconds would mean about 2.3 km away. The blast of the energy alluded to would have hurled him to the ground at that distance. Tunguska blast (about 16MT equivalent) knocked people off at what - 400km?
64
posted on
06/09/2006 9:37:15 AM PDT
by
GSlob
Taking notes on the innumerate, placemarker
65
posted on
06/09/2006 9:38:03 AM PDT
by
js1138
(Well I say there are some things we don't want to know! Important things!")
To: mwilli20
66
posted on
06/09/2006 9:40:22 AM PDT
by
DBrow
To: CardCarryingMember.VastRightWC
67
posted on
06/09/2006 9:42:04 AM PDT
by
mollynme
(cogito, ergo freepum)
To: LIConFem
"Huh? The speed of sound is only ~720mph at sea level (would travel about 85 miles in 7 minutes)." Then how could a metorite which SLOWED to 720 mph to make a sonic boom and burn up to a point where they can't even say if any of it made it to the ground do any damage like a nuclear bomb at Hiroshima? Shouldn't northern Norway be devasted? Miles of trees blasted into toothpicks and villages vaporized?
To: Nathan Zachary
"Then how could a metorite which SLOWED to 720 mph to make a sonic boom..."
Who said it slowed to 720mph? It apparently hit a mountain side (very likely going a lot faster than 720mph), and the resulting *boom* is what was heard and felt for quite some distance.
And the Hiroshima bomb comparison was just speculation on the part of the astronomer.
69
posted on
06/09/2006 9:52:24 AM PDT
by
LIConFem
(It is by will alone I set my mind in motion...)
To: Nathan Zachary
See my 66 and 62. We get pounded frequently with rocks and chunks of ice (mixed with dust). Some are big enough to go BOOM when they hit, and most of these explosions are way way up in the air- all we get down here is the boom and a flash. Use Clusty to look up bolide and meteorite and similar topics.
Nobody is saying these bolides cause any damage- they are comparing the energy released (kinetic energy transferred from the incoming bolide to the atmosphere) to something us humans are in awe of, nukes. If they said "the energy transferred was almost two million joules" few would understand and nobody would be impressed. But comparing it to one of the smallest atomic explosions makes a reference point people can grasp. If one of these bolides reached a city and then broke up you'd see damage, like in Tunguska where trees were flattened for miles, all pointing out from the blast center.
In an earlier post I said that we actually exploded nukes in space- Starfish Prime went off in near space someplace north of the Johnson Islands. It went off with the force of FIVE Hiroshima bombs, yet neither the Johnsons nor Hawaii took any damage. It's just that, that's how much energy was released. Look up Starfish Prime.
70
posted on
06/09/2006 9:56:56 AM PDT
by
DBrow
To: LIConFem
Then where's the crater?
If a big meteor struck the earth with that much energy there would be devastation like the one which hit Syberia at the turn of the last century.
To: Nathan Zachary
The one that "hit" Siberia (Tunguska??) didn't actually hit. It exploded before impact. Perhaps this did the same.
Can't really say, 'cause I wasn't there...
72
posted on
06/09/2006 10:00:32 AM PDT
by
LIConFem
(It is by will alone I set my mind in motion...)
To: 1FreeAmerican
A meteorite has never been found at Tungusta- the theory is that the explosion was caused by methane gas.Nope. Am at the lab at the moment. When I get home, I will post an analysis of this event.
73
posted on
06/09/2006 10:01:52 AM PDT
by
RadioAstronomer
(Senior member of Darwin Central)
To: RegulatorCountry
What was the very impressive meteor shower, during the winter a few years back? I remember freezing my butt off, standing outside in my back yard, to watch. It was pretty impressive. Some were large enough to leave smoke trails, and ended with a flash. Didn't hear any noise associated with this, though. These were a different color from the far more frequent, smaller ones. Reddish, instead of blue-white.
As noted those were probably the Leonids. Unfortunately due to so imprecisise predictions the most impressive display of them wasn't seen by many people in the US; there was a "fireball storm" that was unbelievable. Not the thousands of meteors a minute as in 1966, but a couple really bright fireballs every minute. I saw one that lit up the entire countryside like daylight when it detonated, and the glowing smoke trail lasted over 5 minutes.
The issue of the "colors" people see for meteors is complicated...and it varies from person to person. ALL the Leonids looked green to me, but meteors from other showers don't.
Most unique aspect of the Leonids is they're really, really, really fast - by far the fastest of the meteor showers, and much faster than the routine erratic meteors you see every night once in a while.
To: DBrow
So it DIDN'T hit the earth then. It burned up like most of them do. That's nothing new. You can see those every night, and sometimes a larger one that puts on a good show for a couple seconds. Then again I live in a northern State and out in the country and can acually SEE the stars clearly. I keep forgetting that this is something city dwellers seldom if ever see.
To: Nathan Zachary
See my 66. The bolide came in, blew up, and at that time transferred most of it's energy to the air, making a big boom. Then, small chunks (meteorites) hit a frozen lake at much lower energy (they would have fallen ballistically at some terminal velocity).
Meteor Crater was different- that was a chunk of nickel-iron that did NOT blow up (and transfer energy to the air), but hit Earth and made a sizeable crater. Anyone within sixty miles or more would have been killed. It would have destroyed a city and it's burbs.
BTW, 1 kiloton is 3.08E12 foot-pounds and Hiroshima was, I think, 12 kilotons. So if you know the weight of your car and how fast it is going, you can calculate how many Hiroshimas of kinetic energy your car has at that speed.
Or, if you observe a bolide and can figure its mass and speed from its entry orbit, you can figure the kinetic energy out in Hiroshimas (or joules or foot-pounds). If it blows up in the air and fragments fall ballistically (which is what usually happens) you can approximate the energy spent in the air.
76
posted on
06/09/2006 10:10:19 AM PDT
by
DBrow
To: mwilli20
This has Karl Rove written all over it. "Where is the missing 6.9 minutes Scooter?"
77
posted on
06/09/2006 10:10:30 AM PDT
by
BallyBill
(Serial Hit-N-Run poster)
To: DBrow
I've seen the aerial shots of Meteor Crater. Man, that thing hit pretty close to that road. It's a good thing no one was hurt.
78
posted on
06/09/2006 10:11:42 AM PDT
by
GBA
To: Nathan Zachary
So it DIDN'T hit the earth then. It burned up like most of them do. That's nothing new. You can see those every night, and sometimes a larger one that puts on a good show for a couple seconds.
Bolides that are big enough to produce an audible sound when they detonate are nothing new, but they're pretty rare.
To: Nathan Zachary
Right, but it made a bright flash/streak and a big bang, which us people have always thought either scary or cool.
That's why it makes news.
I live in the city with its city lights (al I can see are stars, open clusters, and some globulars).
To see the Milky Way and nebulas and stuff I must drive to Mount Pinos, where there's abig star party every moonless weekend.
I envy your skies!
80
posted on
06/09/2006 10:13:35 AM PDT
by
DBrow
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