Meteor explodes over Russia, 1,100 injured
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In
this frame grab made from a video done with a dashboard camera, on a
highway from Kostanai, Kazakhstan, to Chelyabinsk region, Russia,
provided by Nasha Gazeta newspaper, on Friday, Feb. 15, 2013 a meteorite
contrail is seen. A meteor streaked across the sky of Russia’s Ural
Mountains on Friday morning, causing sharp explosions and reportedly
injuring around 100 people, including many hurt by broken glass. |
MOSCOW (AP)
-- With a blinding flash and a booming shock wave, a meteor blazed
across the western Siberian sky Friday and exploded with the force of 20
atomic bombs, injuring more than 1,000 people as it blasted out windows
and spread panic in a city of 1 million.
While
NASA estimated the meteor was only about the size of a bus and weighed
an estimated 7,000 tons, the fireball it produced was dramatic. Video
shot by startled residents of the city of Chelyabinsk showed its
streaming contrails as it arced toward the horizon just after sunrise,
looking like something from a world-ending science-fiction movie.
The
largest recorded meteor strike in more than a century occurred hours
before a 150-foot asteroid passed within about 17,000 miles (28,000
kilometers) of Earth. The European Space Agency said its experts had
determined there was no connection between the asteroid and the Russian
meteor - just cosmic coincidence.
The meteor
above western Siberia entered the Earth's atmosphere about 9:20 a.m.
local time (10:20 p.m. EST Thursday) at a hypersonic speed of at least
33,000 mph (54,000 kph) and shattered into pieces about 30-50 kilometers
(18 to 32 miles) high, the Russian Academy of Sciences said. NASA
estimated its speed at about 40,000 mph, said it exploded about 12 to 15
miles high, released 300 to 500 kilotons of energy and left a trail 300
miles long.
"There was panic. People had no
idea what was happening," said Sergey Hametov of Chelyabinsk, about
1,500 kilometers (930 miles) east of Moscow in the Ural Mountains.
"We
saw a big burst of light, then went outside to see what it was and we
heard a really loud, thundering sound," he told The Associated Press by
telephone.
The shock wave blew in an estimated
100,000 square meters (more than 1 million square feet) of glass,
according to city officials, who said 3,000 buildings in Chelyabinsk
were damaged. At a zinc factory, part of the roof collapsed.
The
Interior Ministry said about 1,100 people sought medical care after the
shock wave and 48 were hospitalized. Most of the injuries were caused
by flying glass, officials said.
Scientists
estimated the meteor unleashed a force 20 times more powerful than the
Hiroshima bomb, although the space rock exploded at a much higher
altitude. Amy Mainzer, a scientist at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory,
said the atmosphere acted as a shield.
The shock wave may have shattered windows, but "the atmosphere absorbed the vast majority of that energy," she said.
Emergency
Situations Ministry spokesman Vladimir Purgin said many of the injured
were cut as they flocked to windows to see what caused the intense flash
of light, which momentarily was brighter than the sun.
There was no immediate word on any deaths or anyone struck by space fragments.
President
Vladimir Putin summoned the nation's emergencies minister and ordered
immediate repairs. "We need to think how to help the people and do it
immediately," he said.
Some meteorite
fragments fell in a reservoir outside the town of Chebarkul, the
regional Interior Ministry office said. The crash left an eight-meter
(26-foot) crater in the ice.
Lessons had just
started at Chelyabinsk schools when the meteor exploded, and officials
said 258 children were among those injured. Amateur video showed a
teacher speaking to her class as a powerful shock wave hit the room.
Yekaterina
Melikhova, a high school student whose nose was bloody and whose upper
lip was covered with a bandage, said she was in her geography class when
a bright light flashed outside.
"After the
flash, nothing happened for about three minutes. Then we rushed
outdoors. ... The door was made of glass, a shock wave made it hit us,"
she said.
Russian television ran video of
athletes at a city sports arena who were showered by shards of glass
from huge windows. Some of them were still bleeding.
Other
videos showed a long shard of glass slamming into the floor close to a
factory worker and massive doors blown away by the shock wave.
Meteors
typically cause sizeable sonic booms when they enter the atmosphere
because they are traveling so much faster than the speed of sound.
Injuries on the scale reported Friday, however, are extraordinarily
rare.
"I went to see what that flash in the
sky was about," recalled resident Marat Lobkovsky. "And then the window
glass shattered, bouncing back on me. My beard was cut open, but not
deep. They patched me up. It's OK now."
Another resident, Valya Kazakov, said some elderly women in his neighborhood started crying out that the world was ending.
The
many broken windows exposed residents to the bitter cold as
temperatures in the city were expected to plummet to minus 20 Celsius
(minus 4 Fahrenheit) overnight. The regional governor put out a call for
any workers who knew how to repair windows.
Russian-language hashtags for the meteorite quickly shot up into Twitter's top trends.
"Jeez, I just woke up because my bed started shaking! The whole house is moving!" tweeted Alisa Malkova.
Social
media was flooded with video from the many dashboard cameras that
Russians mount in their cars, in case of pressure from corrupt traffic
police or a dispute after an accident.
The dramatic event prompted an array of reactions from prominent Russians.
Prime
Minister Dmitry Medvedev, speaking at an economic forum in the Siberian
city of Krasnoyarsk, said the meteor could be a symbol for the forum,
showing that "not only the economy is vulnerable, but the whole planet."
Vladimir Zhirinovsky, a nationalist leader noted for his vehement statements, blamed the Americans.
"It's not meteors falling. It's the test of a new weapon by the Americans," the RIA Novosti news agency quoted him as saying.
Deputy
Prime Minister Dmitry Rogozin said the incident showed the need for
leading world powers to develop a system to intercept objects falling
from space.
"At the moment, neither we nor the
Americans have such technologies" to shoot down meteors or asteroids,
he said, according to the Interfax news agency.
Meteoroids
are small pieces of space debris - usually parts of comets or asteroids
- that are on a collision course with the Earth. They become meteors
when they enter the Earth's atmosphere. Most meteors burn up in the
atmosphere, but if they survive the frictional heating and strike the
surface of the Earth they are called meteorites.
NASA
said the Russian fireball was the largest reported since 1908, when a
meteor hit Tunguska, Siberia, and flattened an estimated 80 million
trees. Chelyabinsk is about 5,000 kilometers (3,000 miles) west of
Tunguska. The Tunguska blast, attributed to a comet or asteroid
fragment, is generally estimated to have been about 10 megatons.
Scientists
believe that a far larger meteorite strike on what today is Mexico's
Yucatan Peninsula may have been responsible for the extinction of the
dinosaurs about 66 million years ago. According to that theory, the
impact would have thrown up vast amounts of dust that blanketed the sky
for decades and altered the climate on Earth.
The
object hailed from the asteroid belt between Mars and Jupiter, becoming
a meteor as it streaked through the earth's atmosphere, Bill Cooke,
head of the Meteoroid Environments Office at NASA's Marshall Space
Flight Center in Huntsville, Alabama, said.
Paul
Chodas, research scientist at the Near Earth Object Program Office at
the Jet Propulsion Laboratory, said that ground telescopes would have
needed to point in the right direction at the right time to spot
Friday's incoming meteor.
"It would be very faint and difficult to detect, not impossible, but difficult," Chodas said.
The
150-foot space rock that safely hurtled past Earth at 2:25 p.m. EST
Friday was dubbed Asteroid 2012 DA14 and was discovered a year ago. It
came closer than many communication and weather satellites that orbit
22,300 miles up.
The asteroid was invisible to
astronomers in the United States at the time of its closest approach on
the opposite of the world. But in Australia, astronomers used
binoculars and telescopes to watch the point of light speed across the
clear night sky.
Jim Green, NASA's director of planetary science, called the back-to-back celestial events an amazing display.
"This
is indeed very rare and it is historic," he said on NASA TV. "These
fireballs happen about once a day or so, but we just don't see them
because many of them fall over the ocean or in remote areas. "
Experts
said the Russian meteor could have produced much more serious problems
in the area hosting nuclear and chemical weapons disposal facilities.
Vladimir
Chuprov of Greenpeace Russia noted that the meteor struck only 100
kilometers (60 miles) from the Mayak nuclear storage and disposal
facility, which holds dozens of tons of weapons-grade plutonium.
The
panic and confusion that followed the meteor quickly gave way to
typical Russian black humor and entrepreneurial instincts. Several
people smashed in the windows of their houses in the hopes of receiving
compensation, the RIA Novosti news agency reported.
Others quickly took to the Internet and put what they said were meteorite fragments up for sale.
One
of the most popular jokes was that the meteorite was supposed to fall
on Dec. 21, 2012 - when many believed the Mayan calendar predicted the
end of the world - but was delivered late by Russia's notoriously
inefficient postal service.
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