Penticton Herald

Siberian blast still subject of some debate

- Ken Tapping is an astronomer with the National Research Council's Dominion Radio Astrophysi­cal Observator­y, Penticton, BC, V2A 6J9.

The old, black-and-white pictures show men up to their knees in mud and water, making measuremen­ts with theodolite­s and other instrument­s, with their heads surrounded by a fog of mosquitoes. These pictures were taken in 1921, in Siberia, when scientists were trying to have a closer look at what happened there in 1908.

On the morning of June 30, 1908, at Tunguska, Siberia there was a huge explosion. Trees were flattened for tens of kilometres, and glasses rattled on shelves in Paris. Thanks to political instabilit­ies, the First World War and then the Revolution, it was not until 1921 that scientists made it to that remote location, to investigat­e what happened.

The widely held theory was that something had come in from space at high speed, entered the atmosphere and exploded, causing the blast wave that flattened the trees. Something big enough to do that should have left fragments that reached the ground.

In absolutely horrible conditions, these dedicated individual­s were there to survey the site and find some of those bits. Paradoxica­lly, they found evidence of a huge explosion, but found no crater and no cosmic debris at all. That is how the situation remains.

The most widely held theory at the moment is that the object that caused the blast was made of ice.

Then most of it would have vaporized in the atmosphere and anything left would have melted long ago, providing more habitat for breeding mosquitoes. There is still no explanatio­n that everyone is happy with, but some new research has come up with an idea that seems to fit the bill, an ominous one.

Some Russian scientists have been researchin­g the event. They calculated what would have happened if a lump of ice came into the atmosphere at around 20 kilometres a second: a typical velocity for such objects. Their conclusion was that unless it was coming straight down, it would have been vaporized long before it got low enough to cause an explosion that produced damage at ground level.

The few witness statements from the time of the event indicate an oblique path through the atmosphere.

They therefore suggested something else: a lump of iron 200 metres across, which did not hit the ground at all; it simply shot through our atmosphere at high speed and went back into space. Something that big could absorb all the heat produced by a few seconds in the Earth's atmosphere, and something that massive would not slow down much. Its path would be an almost straight line that happened to just miss the Earth, so it passed by through the lower atmosphere.

Huge shock waves would been produced, which, if the body passed close enough to the ground, could have done the observed damage.

If this object had hit the ground, it would have blown a crater three kilometres across.

The jury might still be out on what actually took place over Tunguska in 1908. However, over the Earth's 4.5-billion-year history, we have been hit many times, and it will happen again.

After dark, Saturn and brilliant Jupiter lie close together low in the south, with Mars rising in the east. Venus, even brighter, rises in the early hours. It is worth getting out the telescope. The Moon will reach First Quarter on the 23rd.

 ?? LEONID KULIK EXPEDITION/ SpecialtoT­he Herald ?? Some of the estimated 80 million trees that were felled by a 1908 blast above Siberia.
LEONID KULIK EXPEDITION/ SpecialtoT­he Herald Some of the estimated 80 million trees that were felled by a 1908 blast above Siberia.
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