Iran Daily

US space agency: Huge meteor exploded in Earth’s atmosphere in December

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Ahuge fireball exploded in the Earth’s atmosphere in December, according to NASA. The blast was the second largest of its kind in 30 years, and the biggest since the fireball over Chelyabins­k in Russia six years ago, BBC reported.

But it went largely unnoticed until now because it blew up over the Bering Sea, off Russia’s Kamchatka Peninsula.

The space rock exploded with 10 times the energy released by the Hiroshima atomic bomb.

Lindley Johnson, planetary defense officer at NASA, told BBC News a fireball this big is only expected about two or three times every 100 years.

At about noon local time on December 18, the asteroid barreled through the atmosphere at a speed of 32km/s, on a steep trajectory of seven degrees.

Measuring several meters in size, the space rock exploded 25.6km above the Earth’s surface, with an impact energy of 173 kilotons.

“That was 40 percent the energy release of Chelyabins­k, but it was over the Bering Sea so it didn’t have the same type of effect or show up in the news,” said Kelly Fast, near-earth objects observatio­ns program manager at NASA.

“That’s another thing we have in our defense, there’s plenty of water on the planet.”

Fast was discussing the event at the 50th Lunar and Planetary Science Conference in The Woodlands, near Houston, Texas, the US.

Tough task

Military satellites picked up the blast last year; NASA was notified of the event by the US Air Force.

Johnson said the fireball came in over an area not too far from routes used by commercial planes flying between North America and Asia. So researcher­s have been checking with airlines to see if there were any reported sightings of the event.

In 2005, Congress tasked NASA with finding 90 percent of near-earth asteroids of 140 meters in size or larger by 2020. Space rocks of this size are socalled ‘problems without passports’ because they are expected to affect whole regions if they collide with Earth. But scientists estimate it will take them another 30 years to fulfil this congressio­nal directive.

Once an incoming object is identified, NASA has had some notable success at calculatin­g where on Earth the impact will occur, based on a precise determinat­ion of its orbit.

In June 2018, the small three-meter asteroid 2018 LA was discovered by a ground-based observator­y in Arizona, the US, eight hours before impact. The Center for Near-earth Object Studies at NASA’S Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) then made a precision determinat­ion of its orbit, which was used to calculate a probable impact location. This showed the rock was likely to hit southern Africa.

Just as the calculatio­n suggested, a fireball was recorded over Botswana by security camera footage on a farm. Fragments of the object were later found in the area.

Improved monitoring

But the latest event over the Bering Sea shows that larger objects can collide with us without warning, underlinin­g the need for enhanced monitoring.

A more robust network would be dependent not only on ground telescopes, but space-based observator­ies also.

A mission concept in developmen­t would see a telescope called Neocam launched to a gravitatio­nal balance point in space, where it would discover and characteri­ze potentiall­y hazardous asteroids larger than 140 meters.

Dr. Amy Mainzer, the chief scientist on Neocam at JPL, said, “The idea is really to get as close as possible to reaching that 90 percent goal of finding the 140-meter and larger nearearth asteroids given to NASA by Congress.

She said that if the mission did not launch, projection­s suggested it would “take us many decades to get there with the existing suite of ground-based surveys”.

Mainzer added, “But if you have an Ir-based (infrared) telescope, it goes a lot faster”.

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GETTY IMAGES

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