NASA Meteoroid-Spotting Program Captures Brightest-Yet Moon Impact 66
From a NASA press release published Friday: "For the past 8 years, NASA astronomers have been monitoring the Moon for signs of explosions caused by meteoroids hitting the lunar surface. 'Lunar meteor showers' have turned out to be more common than anyone expected, with hundreds of detectable impacts occurring every year. They've just seen the biggest explosion in the history of the program."
Watch the flash for yourself.
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Sigh. 1999, 2001, 2010... all passed.
WHERE'S MY FREAKING HOVER CAR?????
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Where's Michael Bay?
Maybe he saw what James Cameron did at the bottom of the Pacific, and decided to top that
Nooo! (Score:1)
C'mon NASA, get your act together on units (Score:5, Interesting)
"On March 17, 2013, an object about the size of a small boulder hit the lunar surface in Mare Imbrium," says Bill Cooke of NASA's Meteoroid Environment Office.
"size of a small boulder"? This has to be one of the most useless size descriptions possible (I suppose they could have said "the size of a random rock"). Given that they later indicate
The 40 kg meteoroid measuring 0.3 to 0.4 meters wide
it's not as if they shouldn't have been able to come up with a more descriptive metaphor.
Re:C'mon NASA, get your act together on units (Score:4, Funny)
Where's the kaboom? You call that an earth shattering kaboom?
Oh. Wait.
I
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Where's the kaboom? You call that an earth shattering kaboom?
Oh. Wait.
I
It's on the moon, silly. That should be a "moon shattering kaboom". And it seems on-one has ever heard one of those, so we don't know how they sound like.
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Where's the kaboom? You call that an earth shattering kaboom?
Oh. Wait.
I
It's on the moon, silly. That should be a "moon shattering kaboom". And it seems on-one has ever heard one of those, so we don't know how they sound like.
I was thinking about this. On the next trip to the moon they should stick a few seismic monitoring devices around the place. From that they could synthesize some audio which would make that youtube video a bit more exciting, and start a few flame wars on why there is audio at all from people who don't read tfs.
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Fortunately, NASA already did that...
http://www.lpi.usra.edu/lunar/missions/apollo/apollo_15/experiments/ps/ [usra.edu]
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Unfortunately, they stopped transmitting in 1977 (so no useful information to correlate with today's more advanced remote sensing capabilities). Either a few more (simple) landers are in order, or perhaps we could get some seismic information from laser interferometry off the the corner-cube reflectors we left on the moon (from an Earth-orbiting satellite with an *incredibly fast* fringe counter --- looks hard with today's technology, but perhaps not *that* far away to measure shifts to the O(10GHz) varying
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'Lunar meteor showers' have turned out to be more common than anyone expected
I find this a bit worrying. When Comet Shoemaker-Levy hit Jupiter it was estimated to be a once in a century or more event, but since then marks left behind by at least two and possibly three other strikes have been seen. I wonder if estimates for the amount o
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I find this a bit worrying. When Comet Shoemaker-Levy hit Jupiter it was estimated to be a once in a century or more event, but since then marks left behind by at least two and possibly three other strikes have been seen
.
Sad that Galileo's antenna didn't open. Headed towards Jupiter it was in a position to film the comet pieces as they hit
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Galileo_(spacecraft)#Main_antenna_failure [wikipedia.org]
Now that would of been very cool to of seen.
I wonder if estimates for the amount of material drifting around the solar system aren't considerably off
.
Think we've been seeing this from Russian dash cams. But those who gave us the numbers also claim Jupiter's gravity
protects Earth to a great extent.
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I am pretty sure the seismic gear was shut down remotely to save money on the ground.
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The PSE was part of ALSEP, a package/system used on all the later Apollo missions that had several experiments all connected to a central transmitter and power source (although a few would use their own power sources). By 1977, pretty much all of them had only one or two experiments still working, and they struggled to provided power to both the transmitter and the experiments at the same time. The older 2 of the 4 PSEs were only partially operating. It was predicted there would only be enough power to p
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What stroke me more is at the end of the video they suggest to stay indoors during meteor showers.
I'd say the risk of your bulding being struck is higher than that of a space-walking astroaut, due to the larger area. And such a 5-ton-TNT hit is a pretty devastating blow to pretty much anything we can build. That is, unless they'd go deep underground (for more reasons than meteorites a good idea).
Re:C'mon NASA, get your act together on units (Score:4, Insightful)
Granted, at that point they were talking about not staying out in a meteor shower if you're *on the moon*. That might be more appropriate advice than on Earth --- it's the atmosphere that keeps people safe from being killed by the average 40 tons a day of space debris raining down on the planet. Staying a bit less exposed won't protect you from a 5-ton hit, but it might keep you from getting punctured by some pea-sized shrapnel arriving at far higher than normal frequency in the same debris clusters with 40cm chunks.
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Not sure 'boulder' quite qualifies as a metaphor, especially in that we're talking about the same thing, rocks. I was taught that metaphor was used to describe one thing in terms of another, disparate, thing. "A rock the size of a ship" could be a metaphor, for instance.
As for size, I wonder if that might not be generational or possibly geographical. When I was a lad, there were rocks. Unless specified or implied by context, rocks were usually something that one might readily pick up. Boulder, on the o
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"small boulder" is completely the correct term to use. Just because it sounds like the talk you'd hear on the street, doesn't mean that it's not a precisely worded technical description.
(Yes, I am a geologist, and yes
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Had no idea there was a geologists' definition for this. Thanks! But I think your reply ought more correctly be to femtobyte. I take note that my seat of the pants experiential take wasn't so far off, and I stand by my stating that "small boulder" is not a metaphor but rather a simple description.
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I'll admit my "units" dig was somewhat of a worn-out trollish dig. However, the substance of the criticism --- poor science reporting for engaging the general public --- remains. NASA is usually pretty good at relaying scientific information to a general public audience; I'd expect better than this type of unhelpful jargon (correct using a technical definition of boulder at slightly larger than 10 inches / 25cm, but pretty useless to most readers). Clarity in communications is a major part of the *job* of t
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C'mon, they know they're talking to dummies, they have to K.I.S.S.
That's exactly why you don't use an uninformative description like "size of a small boulder." Someone familiar with details of geological jargon might know that "boulder" often technically refers to a rock over 25cm (so "small boulder" is an accurate estimate for 30-40cm object) --- however, for a "dummy" in a general audience, the term is completely useless. If you want to be more visually descriptive than 30-40cm (12-16 inch) diameter, say something like "large watermelon sized" or "beachball sized," etc.
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"Boulder" says precisely what it means to say, no more and no less.
Re:C'mon NASA, get your act together on units (Score:5, Interesting)
"On March 17, 2013, an object about the size of a small boulder hit the lunar surface in Mare Imbrium," says Bill Cooke of NASA's Meteoroid Environment Office.
"size of a small boulder"? This has to be one of the most useless size descriptions possible (I suppose they could have said "the size of a random rock"). Given that they later indicate
The 40 kg meteoroid measuring 0.3 to 0.4 meters wide
it's not as if they shouldn't have been able to come up with a more descriptive metaphor.
That bothered me less than the fact that in the same sentence they describe its size and mass in metric units but its speed in imperial units.
Size of a small boulder (Score:2)
And shape of a mashed potato.
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I'm more thrown off by the tone of the narration in the video. The way she talks in a monotonous tone through the whole thing and the way she adds "he said/she said" to attribute a quotation sounded off because there was no pause or change in tone between it and the quotation itself. I felt like I was in school again listening to some home-made video on lunar impacts by a teacher who has never read lines aloud before.
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Normal people, who have experience with the outdoors, have no trouble with such a comparison.
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"On March 17, 2013, an object about the size of a small boulder hit the lunar surface in Mare Imbrium," says Bill Cooke of NASA's Meteoroid Environment Office.
"size of a small boulder"? This has to be one of the most useless size descriptions possible (I suppose they could have said "the size of a random rock"). Given that they later indicate
That all depends. Was it a metric boulder (usually measured in liths, like microlith - very small boulder - or megalith - huge rectangular boulder that causes evolutionary changes) or was it an imperial boulder?
The 40 kg meteoroid measuring 0.3 to 0.4 meters wide
it's not as if they shouldn't have been able to come up with a more descriptive metaphor.
Ah, 40 kg - it was a metric boulder.
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"size of a small boulder"? This has to be one of the most useless size descriptions
NASA message is intended to be delivered to anybody, not only the /. geeks. While we (/. geeks) are used to numbers and proportions, a "small boulder" - while less accurate - is represented better by most people than 0.634124 meter.
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So what substance exploded? (Score:2)
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>Impact kinetic effects are not the same as an explosion.
Physics, you fail it.
Hit a piece of metal with a hammer and it will heat up; a well known physics demonstration. Slam a meteor into the ground hard enough and it will get so hot it becomes a gas. And what is an explosion but a rapidly expanding ball of hot gases?
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An explosion is a rapid increase in volume and release of energy in an extreme manner, usually with the generation of high temperatures and the release of gases.
--Wikipedia (not the final word on technical sources; feel free to reply with a more definitive description)
The impact converts the massive kinetic energy of fast-moving space items into a lot of localized *friggin' hot* material: the white-hot flash that you see in the video, as the lunar surface is explosively vaporized into a blast of ionized plasma. Impact kinetic effects (with enough energy) *are* very similar to an explosion from some other source releasing similar energy. When we send landing crafts,
Re:So what substance exploded? (Score:5, Informative)
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Could the entire moon explode if a bigger asteroid hits it?
Yes, but the ass would have to be on some killer steroids.
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Given the ridiculous number of orders of magnitude in expenditure between "defense spending" and analyzing data from a video camera pointed at the moon to see if we can learn anything interesting, I'm not particularly seeing the validity of your comparison. If NASA did *nothing else* over the past year than produce this video (no Mars rovers or anything else), they'd still be a fantastically cheap and productive enterprise compared to defense spending (which spends ~40x more per year that all of NASA to mak
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Beware (Score:2)
That's what you get (Score:2)
Moon, didn't you know it is your right to have an atmosphere. How dare anyone deny you your right to defend yourself. Who will you sue for damages? Your face has been forever changed and someone else must pay for that!
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Moon, didn't you know it is your right to have an atmosphere.
The moon's atmosphere is made of regolith, You insensitive clod! Solid rock strata means its stratosphere is a lot tougher than ours!
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Earth's atmospheric pressure at sea level is roughly equivalent to having ~10m of water (1g/cm^3 density) above our heads. At a density of ~1.5g/cm^3, and a thickness between 5 and 10m, lunar regolith [nasa.gov] is in many areas equivalent to *less* mass than the atmosphere protecting our heads. That "solid rock" might be a bit less tough than you think compared to the crazy big chunk of air covering us on Earth.
The solar system is busier than we thought (Score:2)
It's amazing how much miscellaneous rock is floating around this solar system. Four sizable chunks of rock (tens of meters) have gone by the earth in the last week, one within lunar orbit. None were known objects.
There's a mile-sized one going by on March 31st, but closest approach is over 3 million miles.
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Hazard to Earth from the Moon? (Score:2)
Anyone know how big of an impact to the Moon could be a hazard to Earth (for example, from ejected material).
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The latter case is pretty implausible : you'd want an ejectum of several kilometres diameter to be a worthwhile opponent. The 50-odd metres of the Barringer impactor really isn'
Poor Znntz (Score:2)
I told him and TOLD him, not to text while approaching the base .. but nooo ...
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