http://www.space.com/scienceastronomy/siberian_meteor_021014.html

The U.S. Department of Defense has confirmed an apparent space rock that lit
a fire in the night sky above a remote region of Siberia last month.
Meanwhile, scientists struggle to pin down whether or not the object slammed
into the planet.

Eyewitnesses in the Bodaibo district reported seeing a fireball race across
the sky Sept. 24. Hunters later said they found a crater surrounded by
burned forest. A seismic monitor in the region, according to the British NEO
Information Center possibly recorded the event.

NEOs are Near Earth Objects, mostly asteroids that roam the region of space
through which Earth orbits the Sun. When one enters Earth's atmosphere, it
is termed a meteor. Smaller meteors burn up before reaching the surface and
can be seen as "shooting stars." Objects as big as a car or bus generate
so-called fireballs; a few small pieces, if anything, might reach the
surface.

While looking for nukes

Now the U.S. Department of Defense has confirmed part of the Siberian meteor
's fiery path through the sky, according to Peter Brown in the Meteor
Physics Group at the University of Western Ontario in Canada.

The DoD monitored the rock by satellite from 39 miles (62 kilometers) down
to 19 miles (30 kilometers) above the ground. The agency attempts to track
meteors and impacts in order to differentiate them from missiles and
possible nuclear explosions.

Failing to properly identify a cosmic object as it slams into the planet
could result in an unnecessary nuclear exchange, some military and asteroid
analysts warn.

Evidence for an actual impact near Bodaibo has not been verified by
scientists.

"Unfortunately, at present we do not know exactly what happen there," said
Michael Nazarov of the Laboratory of Meteoritics Vernadsky Institute of
Geochemistry and Analytical Chemistry. "The Bodaibo [seismic] station
recorded a signal which cannot be easily interpreted."

Other seismic recorders farther from the event recorded nothing, indicating
that if the rock did survive its heated plunge through the atmosphere to hit
the ground, the impact was relatively small.

Echoes of 1908

Ironically, the Bodaibo event may go down in history as a small-scale cousin
to another one in 1908, also in Siberia. Then, a meteor thought to be about
the size of a football field exploded above the mostly unpopulated Tunguska
region. Trees were leveled for hundreds of miles around. The explosion was
recorded by less sophisticated seismic equipment farther away, as compared
to the Bodaibo event, Nazarov pointed out in a communication to CCNet, an
electronic newsletter devoted largely to NEO research and discussion.

Nazarov said it would be difficult to find any possible Bodaibo crater in
the remote region, since the event occurred at night and there are few
witnesses to help scientists pin down the object's trajectory and possible
impact location.

Scientists are eager to study impacts and any chunks of meteor that might be
found in order to learn more about the compositions of their parent bodies.
Some asteroids are more solid than others and thus more likely to reach the
ground intact.

The threshold for an asteroid to be potentially devastating on a local scale
is thought to be roughly the size of the 1908 Tunguska rock.

Just last week, an asteroid theorist announced new calculations showing
there are fewer of these small "Tunguska" asteroids in Earth's vicinity and
that they're likely to hit Earth about once every 1,000 years. Astronomers
had thought such minor catastrophes occurred about once per century.

Larger rocks capable of widespread devastation hit the planet less
frequently.



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