Pennsylvania Meteor Report 82
squiggy writes: "Turns out the scorched corn field in Pennsylvania, and the reports of car sized space rocks hitting the earth were a bit overthe top. Likely, the object was very small, disintegrated before impact, and anything that might have reached the ground intact would have been cold to the touch. The full story is here"
What they didnt tell you (Score:1)
They didnt mention the several people injured by the broken glass, and one man blinded. The real question is, did someone travel into the future and exact vengeance on their enemy by sending this "rock" to fall in the right place at the right time to blind the future from the enemies of the past...
Re:Urban Legand (Score:1)
(I'm too lazy to go find it) Some guys from nasa tested a penny frop in a vacumn chamber.
It's fast, a penny dropped from the ESB would likely only sting. They predict that you could probably catch it in your hand.
The county would never have noticed (Score:2)
No take a look at the speed - I don't actually know what the terminal velocity of of rock is but I'm guessing 150-300 MPH. Sounds impressive 'till you realize that there are cars that can hit the low end of that. It's fast but we're talking terrestrial-fast, not astronomical-fast.
So, now figger what damage a sports car going very very fast would do to the county: Not much. Seriously - a sports car weighs around a thousand pounds or so, what would one do if it hit a particularly hard part of the county - say slamming into a cliff along the highway?
Oh, the neighbors might hear the impact or notice the new ditch next door but we're not talking plowing-up-the-earth walls-of-flame call-out-the-Nat'l-Guard stuff here. It's a thud & likely a good thud but still a thud.
Even doubling the speed of the car doesn't do all that much - you just get a stronger thud that would rattle the dishes & crack some plaster on houses close by but that's about it. Now make it a car that's solid all of the way though - still just a big thud. Folks a few blocks away might hear & feel it but still not going to rattle any seismographs in the next state, probably not even ruin any houses it doesn't actually hit up against.
For comparison btw recall that a similar meteor behaved about the same of northern Canada last year and how many parts from it were found on the surface of a frozen lake. Not punched-though but laying on top of the ice melting through slowly - from solar-heat (like any rock on a frozen lake.) Not glowing hot, not punching through the ice, just sitting there.
Re:The county would never have noticed (Score:2)
Re:The county would never have noticed (Score:2)
In this case possibly up to a coupla meters. However a cold rock dropped into an atmosphere with a extremely hot pressure gradient ahead of it ablates pretty fast, by the time it comes down to ground level we're talking a total mass of possibly a few tons and likely distributed amongst several objects. For numbers it's gonna hit the atmosphere at 10-70 km/second, at the bottom will be going a couple hundred kph, the same speed as if it had been dropped from a tall building.
You're right if it's city-block size or greater; it's gonna come down, come down hard & our atmosphere ain't gonna do much for us. But for things much smaller life is a lot rougher for them, better for us. For something under 50m the majority of it will burn up in the atmosphere & the local effects will be minimal.
For some more numbers a 3m diameter object of meteoric metals (x3.5 mass of generic terrestrial rock, a stony (chondrite) would be x1.5) could weigh up to 100 tons and upon impact would create a crater 3 - 5m in diameter. It's kinetic energy is the product of the mass and the square of the velocity. Impressive, but not hazardous outside of it's immediate vicinity & certianly of no danger to the county*.
Finally here's a MPEG [nasa.gov] of a stony coming in through the atmosphere & hitting a parked car in Peekskill NY on Oct. 9, 1992 - it was 12Kg when recovered.
* For non-US readers a "County" is a subsection of a State often encompassing several towns or perhaps a city, not all States have them & their application varies greatly.
Re:The county would never have noticed (Score:2)
Re:The county would never have noticed (Score:2)
Objects generally enter the atmosphere at 10-30Kps if they're asteroidial in origin, 40-70Kps if cometary. If they're big enough aerodynamic effects are negligable - that's a couple hundred meters in diameter & would have disasterous effect upon impact.
However for objects below 50 meters the atmosphere is all crucial - they'll often get so chewed up that nothing makes it down coherent (depends on trajectory, composition and how it comes apart.)
As this object was only a few meters in size initially it's unlikely (though not impossible) that anything recognizable made it to the surface. Certianly it was well within the size limit at which it would have been slowed to it's terminal velocity.
Once folks get away from this idea that we're talking about giant objects slamming into the surface at impossible speeds it all becomes much more realistic. Meteors are bright, they're definitely very impressive coming down, but all of that energy is from the object slowing & ablating.
In this case one could simulate the impact by dropping a frozen cannonball or dense rock from a 30 story or so height, possibly just tossing some gravel or ball bearings, most likely dust. Not exactly gonna cause disaster in the county huh?
Re:Unsurprising... (Score:2)
Re:erratum (Score:1)
Check your own facts, bub. It is quite clearly the Illudium Q-36 Explosive Space Modulator [primenet.com] (spelling of 'Illudium' may vary). If you want to claim something else, find an audio clip.
(I just love the way Marvin the Martian says "modulator".)
--
Re:Oddly enough... (Score:2)
--
Re:Indulge both your fears! (Score:1)
Then of course you'd have to go back into space to get it back...
Pope
What? Bear is driving car? How can that be?!
Re:Unsurprising... (Score:1)
Re:Unsurprising... (Score:1)
"um... According to the article it was 1 to 2 meters across and 30 metric tons.
That sounds car-sized to me."
I was taking a bit of a liberty with the definition of "car-sized" in that context to make an obscure Simpsons reference.
Yeah, I'm an idiot (Score:1)
Did you read the story? (Score:2)
"If this was a rocky asteroid, then it probably measured between 1 and 2 meters across and weighed 30 or so metric tons."
That sounds at least "car sized" by any definition I can think of.
If a car-sized meteor*ite* landed, it would definitely been bigger news...
Re:Unsurprising... (Score:2)
Re:The county would never have noticed (Score:1)
--
Re:The county would never have noticed (Score:2)
--
Re:This is irrational fear #1 (Score:2)
Think 2 inch deep impact mark.
Fortunately, the helmet was steel, and the person I knew who had this happen to him (I was a kid at the time) didn't get killed...
Worldcom [worldcom.com] - Generation Duh!
Indulge both your fears! (Score:2)
"Money
Monetary units - none.
In fact there are three freely convertible currencies in the Galaxy, but none of them count. The Altairian Dollar has recently collapsed, the Flanian Pobble bead is only exchangeable for other Flanian Pobble Beads, and the Triganic Pu has its own very special problems. Its exchange rate of eight Ningis to one Pu is simple enough, but since a Ningi is a rubber coin six thousand eight hundred miles along each side, no one has ever collected enough to own one Pu. Ningis are not negotiable currency, because the Galactibanks refuse to deal in fiddling small change. From this basic premise it is very simple to prove that the Galactibanks are also the product of a deranged imagination."
Just think of the havoc THAT hyperaccelerated piece of small change would cause.
Re:Eyewitness Report (Score:1)
If it makes you feel any better, I thought your comment was funny.
____________________
oh, THOSE kind of aliens! (Score:2)
so what they're saying is that the UFO was small, capable of disintegration at very high speeds (obviously a sign of an advanced life form), and cold, eh? They were probably just searching for some nice hot cambells chick noodle soup
Re:This is irrational fear #1 (Score:1)
Re:The county would never have noticed (Score:2)
In other news... (Score:2)
You can trust us, we're NASA! (Score:1)
It was most likely swamp gas reflected off the planet Venus.
Or a weather balloon, perhaps.
But I would certainly not tell anyone that I saw a fireball the other night.
--
Eyewitness Report (Score:2)
Witnesses heard Mr. King exclaim "Meteor shit!" at which point he smabled back to his shotgun shack muttering abuot "washing it off."
Mr. King was later unable to be found for comment. However, his shack did appear to be very well-stocked with houseplants and lush flora.
That was no meteor! (Score:1)
Wow...I guess the economy _really_ sucks... (Score:1)
Re:Unsurprising... (Score:1)
Re:Unsurprising... (Score:1)
Oddly enough... (Score:4)
Would they tell us? (Score:1)
I've got to believe that if there was a big chunk of space crud that was going to hit Mother Earth that The Powers That Be wouldn't tell us about it until it hit us.
It'd be pretty easy to argue that if we didn't see it coming then it wouldn't be nearly as bad as if we had a week of hysteria and apocalyptic reactions to the event
Too bad it wasn't just a bit bigger... (Score:2)
Plus, on a social note, now we don't get another round of asteroid movies. So much for seeing Jim Carrey climbing around on a metor and screaming as he gets stuck and rides it into Cleveland...
If it were car-sized... (Score:1)
Re:Oddly enough... (Score:1)
Tommorow's Astronomy Picture of the Day (Score:1)
Astronomy Picture of the Day [nasa.gov]
Doesnt that just figure? (Score:1)
+++++++++++++++++++++
Re:Doesnt that just figure? (Score:1)
+++++++++++++++++++++
Re:Armageddon (Score:1)
erratum (Score:1)
so.... (Score:1)
Re:Unsurprising... (Score:1)
That sounds car-sized to me.
Re:The county would never have noticed (Score:1)
Don't come to north central PA looking for moon rocks in corn fields. The rednecks are restless and they don't like geeks (that's why I moved away!)
Re:I hope this scares my Grandma (Score:2)
Exageration? (Score:1)
Are you implying that the US media wasn't completely factual regarding this incident?
...facts and entertainment... (Score:1)
Car-Sized? (Score:1)
Why is it that everything falling from the sky is compared in size to a car? I mean, in the movie Armageddon, they were "Baskeballs and Volkswagons", the chunks of MIR were "as large as a car" and now, people were saying that a falling object was "car-sized".
This reminds me of how they say that voracious fish can skeletonize a cow in less than X minutes. Are these some kind of bizarre empirial system measurement? What's the metric equivalent?
Hmmmmm... (Score:1)
Re:Did anybody listen to the mp3? (Score:1)
Re:Sad... (Score:1)
Re:66,000 lbs! (Score:1)
Re:Damnit. It missed... (Score:1)
Re:The county would never have noticed (Score:1)
uh huh (Score:1)
Armageddon (Score:1)
Did anybody listen to the mp3? (Score:2)
Selinsgrove... (Score:1)
Over the top? (Score:3)
No, the answer is not Cowboy Neal!
I hope this scares my Grandma (Score:1)
If we're really lucky, one of these suckers will land right on her car... making doubly sure she won't be able to drive.
Ratguy
Of course... (Score:1)
Unsurprising... (Score:5)
Actually, for that matter if you read the original story it was saying baseball sized or thereabouts. If anything was the size of a car, maybe the fireball was, but that says next to nothing about the size of the actual meteor.
Believe me, when a car-sized meteor hits a populated area you won't need to go to Slashdot to hear the story.
Re:oh, THOSE kind of aliens! (Score:1)
Re:That was no meteor! (Score:1)
Re:well, (Score:1)
If they are Jewish then they are circum-sized.
Re:What shall we be scared of next!? (Score:1)
Kill them all, I say.
Re:Indulge both your fears! (Score:1)
1 meter... Ouch, I think I just got stung!
10 stories... Hey, who dropped the baseball?
100 stories.. Hey, I've passed out!
250 stories.. Check it out, I'm dead!
3 km... What's this penny doing in my chest cavity, and what's the deal with this hole in my head?
Long story short, by the time it is being dropped from above the atmosphere, it's just ash... or molten metal. There's probably an altitude for molten metal before ash.
Re:This is irrational fear #1 (Score:1)
I DO NOT OWN A LINCOLN TOWN CAR.
Better to stay inside, away from the city.
This is irrational fear #1 (Score:2)
My #2 irrational fear?
Getting hit with a super-accelerated penny.
Re:well, (Score:2)
Re:The county would never have noticed (Score:1)
fire from the sky (Score:1)
Best he could do is some Pennsylvania cornfield.
If it were that large at impact, yes... (Score:2)
Preliminary reports from the cornfield seem to indicate little or no evidence of an actual impact; which would seem to indicate that whatever it was burned up before it reached the ground (as they usually do).
-Coach-
well, (Score:4)
Re:Unsurprising... (Score:1)
Meteor Shower? <dope-slap> (Score:1)
What shall we be scared of next!? (Score:1)
ohh..I like that..
I think that should be the next big scare..
"Nothing to be scared of!"
--
when I was a kid... (Score:1)
Scared the hell out of me. I was certain my house was next. Though I remember thinking it would be pretty cool to have my own meteorite.
-J5K
Re:Oddly enough... (Score:1)
Re:I hope this scares my Grandma (Score:1)
I told you I told you!! (Score:2)
But did any of you listen? Now please, go stand by the stairs, the space robots are coming to protect us.
Damnit. It missed... (Score:1)