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    Russia Meteor Explosion: How Powerful Was It?

    In a cosmic coincidence, a meteor exploded over Russia early Friday (Feb. 15) on the same day another hunk of space rock will whiz close by Earth.

    NASA scientists say the two objects were on very different trajectories and are thus completely unrelated. But Russia has been bombarded before: In 1908, a piece of asteroid or comet exploded over Siberia. Had today's (Feb. 15) asteroid event been as large as that one, many more would be injured or killed.

    "The phenomena are similar," said Mark Boslough, a physicist at Sandia National Laboratories in New Mexico. "It's just that this is much smaller, and it exploded much higher up."

    Explosive power

    Hundreds of people, possibly 1,000, are reportedly injured after today's blast in the Chelyabinsk region, about 930 miles (1,500 kilometers) east of Moscow. Most of the injuries were apparently caused by broken glass from windows that shattered in the shock wave from the fireball. [See Photos of the Russia Meteor Fireball]

    Judging by the reports so far, the space rock was probably in the range of 16 feet to 33 feet (5 meters to 10 meters) in diameter, Boslough told LiveScience. That makes today's meteor a pipsqueak compared with the likely size of the 1908 event, dubbed the Tunguska event after a river near the impact site. That explosion flattened about 800 square miles (1,287 square km) of remote forest.

    Both of these chunks came from the break up of asteroids and comets, which shed smaller, mostly rocky, called meteoroids that orbit the sun. Some of these fragments make their way toward Earth, burning up as they hurtle through the atmosphere, to form a meteor, or shooting star. Larger meteoroids form fireballs as they burn up and disintegrate. If a meteor survives to hit the ground, it's called a meteorite.

    The Tunguska object was an estimated 130 feet (40 m) in diameter, similar to the size of the unrelated asteroid, 2012 DA14, that will come about 17,200 miles (27,700 km) from Earth at 2:24 p.m. Eastern Standard Time (19:24 GMT) today. That makes a big difference in explosive potential, Boslough said.

    "A 50-meter object is 1,000 times as big in terms of explosive energy than a 5-meter object," he said.

    Scientists estimate that 2012 DA14 weighs about 140,000 tons, compared to 10 tons or so for the Russian object.

    A boon for science

    Though it may bizarre that the Russian explosion occurred on the same day as the 2012 DA14 flyby, events like the one over Russia are not extraordinarily rare, Boslough said. There were two similarly sized events in 2009, one over Indonesia and one in South Africa, and another in 1995 over the Marshall Islands, an island country in the northern Pacific Ocean, though all were above relatively remote spots. 

    "If it's the size I suspect, these things happen on average every few years to every decade or so," Boslough said.

    Boslough and other researchers are currently basing their estimates of the size of Friday's meteor on damage reports and YouTube videos uploaded by eyewitnesses. But the proliferation of handheld technology is likely to provide a treasure trove of data for scientists looking to understand the event. Pinpointing the spots where videos are taken and comparing the footage will help nail down the trajectory and speed of the meteor. It's even possible that iPads or other handheld devices with accelerometers recorded the shock wave as it passed, Boslough said.

    "There may be other sources of data we never had in the past," he said. "I think it's pretty exciting to think about mapping out the shock wave and getting more information about this than we've ever had from any past events."

    Follow Stephanie Pappas on Twitter @sipappas or LiveScience @livescience. We're also on Facebook & Google+.

    Copyright 2013 LiveScience, a TechMediaNetwork company. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

    61 comments

    • Neal  •  2 days 19 hrs ago
      Thanks, but you still didn't say how powerful it was.
      • Unspun 1 day 23 hrs ago
        previous statements claimed approximately 14000 megatons. Damage was limited due to an altitude of approximately 7000 feet at time of explosion. Had the entry angle been steeper, the altitude at time of explosion would have been much lower causing much more damage.
    • Fit2print  •  2 days 19 hrs ago
      Did NASA see this one coming too?
    • Chris  •  2 days 19 hrs ago
      For an article that is about the power of the explosion. There is no mention of it
    • Darvenne  •  2 days 19 hrs ago
      So this was a free radical in the mix..almost as if it was a Remora on the Shark that flew by ..Is there a secret Meteor tracking beam hidden in the Urals??
    • Darvenne  •  2 days 19 hrs ago
      Tunguska what a great beast of a Meteor..swept those tree's down as if it was flattened wheat from the columbine...ahhh to be in 1908!.
    • SeeBee78  •  2 days 19 hrs ago
      The problem it seems is with people thinking they have critical thinking skills. It must make one feel pretty important to think entire media and governments are hiding stuff and lying to them. I'm not saying we have full disclosure, there is no possible way we should, I'm saying that not everything is a conspiracy and although things may be shown or told in a certain light doesn't change the fact that sh17 happens and life goes on. Do you really think if there was a god he would be disappointed? How much bloodshed has happened in his name? Christians and Muslims are not truly taught to love, they are taught that if people don't believe as they do they deserve to burn. It is a way of life, a religion based on oppression and aggressive tactics to spread.
      The true problem is not guns, weapons, crazy dictators, or government conspiracies. It is the fact that so many of us are too stupid or weak to deal with reality and so very willing to believe in fairy tales to alleviate the pain!
    • Robert  •  2 days 17 hrs ago
      I still say it was an Off Course N. Korea Missile Sent by there Ace Bomb Center !!!
    • Richard  •  2 days 14 hrs ago
      Sorry, It wasn't a meteor....it was the monkey Iran launched returning to earth.
    • Dont curse...  •  2 days 17 hrs ago
      Relax folks no one died!!! More people died driving to work today then from this or any meteorite since the begiing of recorded history!!!
    • YIKES!  •  2 days 18 hrs ago
      WHY would the accelerometers in an Ipad be making a continuous recording of their sensor readings?!

      Do you know how fast that would fill up the Ipods memory?
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