A team of NASA and international scientists for the first time have gathered
a detailed understanding of the effects on Earth from a small asteroid
impact.
The unprecedented data obtained as the result of the airburst of a meteoroid
over the Russian city of Chelyabinsk on Feb. 15, 2013, has revolutionized
scientists' understanding of this natural phenomenon.
The Chelyabinsk incident was well observed by citizen cameras and other
assets. This provided a unique opportunity for researchers to calibrate the
event, with implications for the study of near-Earth objects (NEOs) and
developing hazard mitigation strategies for planetary defense. Scientists from
nine countries have now established a new benchmark for future asteroid impact
modeling.
"Our goal was to understand all circumstances that resulted in the shock
wave," said meteor expert Peter Jenniskens, co-lead author of a report published
in the journal Science. Jenniskens, a meteor astronomer at NASA’s Ames Research Center
and the SETI
Institute, participated in a field study led by Olga Popova of the Institute for
Dynamics of Geospheres of the Russian Academy of Sciences in Moscow in the weeks
following the event.
“It was important that we followed up with the many citizens who had
firsthand accounts of the event and recorded incredible video while the
experience was still fresh in their minds," said Polpova.
By calibrating the video images using the position of the stars in the night
sky, Jenniskens and Popova calculated the impact speed of the meteor at 42,500
mph (19 kilometers per second). As the meteor penetrated through the atmosphere,
it efficiently fragmented into pieces, peaking at 19 miles (30 kilometers) above
the surface. At that point the light of the meteor appeared brighter than the sun, even for people 62
miles (100 kilometers) away.
Due to the extreme heat, many of the pieces of the debris vaporized before
falling out of the orange glowing debris cloud. Scientists believe that between
9,000 to 13,000 pound (4,000 to 6,000 kilograms) of meteorites fell to the
ground. This included one fragment approximately 1,400 pound (650 kilogram)
recovered from Lake Chebarkul on October 16, 2013, by professional divers guided
by Ural Federal University researchers.
NASA researchers participating in the 59 member consortium study suspect that
the abundance of shock fractures in the rock contributed its break up in the
upper atmosphere. Meteorites made available by Chelyabinsk State University
researchers were analyzed to learn about the origin of the shock veins and their
physical properties.
"One of these meteorites broke along one of these shock veins when we pressed
on it during our analysis," said Derek Sears, a meteoriticist at Ames.
Mike Zolensky, a cosmochemist at NASA’s Johnson Space Center in Houston, may
have found why these shock veins (or shock fractures), were so frail. They
contained layers of small iron grains just inside the vein, which had
precipitated out of the glassy material when it cooled.
"There are cases where impact melt increases a meteorite's mechanical
strength, but Chelyabinsk was weakened by it," said Zolensky.
The impact that created the shock veins may have occurred as long ago as 4.4
billion years. This would have been 115 million years after the formation of the
solar system, according to the research team, who found that the meteorites had
experienced a significant impact event at that time.
“Events that long ago affected how the Chelyabinsk meteoroid broke up in the
atmosphere, influencing the damaging shockwave,” said Jenniskens.
Research is being conducted to better understand the origin and nature of
NEOs. These essential studies are needed to inform our approach to preparing for
the potential discovery and deflection of an object on a collision course with
the Earth.
NASA's recently announced asteroid initiative will be the first mission to
capture and relocate an asteroid. It represents an unprecedented technological
feat that will lead to new scientific discoveries and technological capabilities
that will help protect our home planet.
Aside from representing a potential threat, the study of asteroids and comets
represent a valuable opportunity to learn more about the origins of our solar
system, the source of water on the Earth, and even the origin of organic
molecules that lead to the development of life.
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