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  • #16
    Re: Meteor

    Hunt is on for pieces of van-sized California meteor

    Newscientist.com


    Wanted: fragments of a minivan-sized meteor that exploded over northern California and Nevada on Sunday morning and may well have survived to strike Earth.


    Meteorites – meteors that make landfall – can provide crucial information about the chemical composition of the early solar system. "It's like getting sample return without having to go there," says Bill Cooke of NASA's Meteoroid Environment Office at the Marshall Space Flight Centre in Huntsville, Alabama.

    However, meteorites are rare. Though meteors frequently streak across the sky, they tend to burn up before reaching the ground or they land in the sea.

    There's reason to think the recent meteor is different.

    Apart from exploding over land, it created a sonic boom, so it must have stayed intact for long enough for it to get down into the denser air low in the atmosphere – just 16 kilometres above the Earth's surface, Cooke reckons – raising the chance that some of it hit the dirt.


    He estimates it was about 4 metres long, about 70 metric tonnes and packing the energy of 4 kilotonnes of TNT. "That's about one-fourth the energy of the 'Little Boy' bomb dropped on Hiroshima," he says.

    That makes the rock even bigger than 2008 TC3, a meteorite which was detected before it entered the atmosphere and became the first cosmic impact to be traced from space to landfall when astronomers found its scattered fragments in Sudan in 2008. Cooke is also hoping someone took a video of the new meteor.


    Astronomers used infrasound signals – low frequency sound that travels great distances – detected at two ground-based stations to pinpoint the spots where the new meteor entered the atmosphere and then exploded. They don't yet know where the fragments went.

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    • #17
      Re: Meteor

      They are finding pieces of it around Coloma Ca.

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      • #18
        Re: Meteor

        Yep. Here's some details:

        Astronomer finds meteorite pieces in Gold Country


        12:00 PDT SAN FRANCISCO -- Searchers near historic Sutter's Mill have discovered fragments of the meteorite that exploded high in the sky at sunrise last Sunday.


        Petrus Jenniskens, the same NASA astronomer who trekked across the Nubian desert four years ago to recover fragments of a small asteroid and bring them home, said Wednesday he had found fragments of the space object on the asphalt parking lot of Henningsen Lotus Park, located in the small town of Lotus in El Dorado County.

        A fragment, he said, had fallen on an asphalt road in the parking lot and was crushed into smaller fragments by a car that ran over it.


        "This meteor itself must have been big," Jenniskens said, "probably in the kiloton range. But now we need to find more fragments so we can begin to understand how it broke apart and what was inside it."

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