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Yesterday on Sunday, May 4th, a meteor exploded over southern Ontario in Canada. The sighting occurred just before 4:20 pm local time and produced a flash of light that witnesses say rivaled the brightness of the sun. The explosion caused a loud crashing sound, leading many citizens to wonder if their house had sustained any damage.
The meteor was about half a meter long, causing it to explode with the force of 20-30 tons of dynamite, astronomy professor Peter Brown told CBC News. Although the Earth gets pelted with up to 78,000 tons of space debris each year, most of them occur over water or uninhabited areas.
Read more at www.iflscience.com...
originally posted by: sparky31
not surprised,if you go to neo website there is a few close ones in next few days and what i,ve been noticing they seem to be getting more regular.
neo.jpl.nasa.gov...
originally posted by: InTheLight
I'm glad it exploded...we dodged another one.
originally posted by: Rob48
originally posted by: InTheLight
I'm glad it exploded...we dodged another one.
Hardly. If it was only half a metre in diameter it would never have reached the ground. It would have to be much, much bigger than that to reach Earth. (The Chelyabinsk meteor last year was more like 20 metres across and only fragments hit the ground.)
Still, thanks for flagging this up OP! I hadn't heard about it. These things are getting captured more and more with the ubiquity of video cameras, dashcams etc.
originally posted by: Rob48
a reply to: InTheLight
Yes perhaps I was a bit hasty in saying that it wouldn't reach the ground (after all, tiny micrometeorites do make it to Earth, but then they are going a lot slower!) What I really meant is that a half-metre meteor is not really a serious threat (unless it happens to land on you...).
I think metre-sized meteors enter the Earth's atmosphere pretty frequently, i.e. at least one a year on average. And of course with so many more cameras around today we should get to see more and more of them
Meteorites of this size hit the earth several times a week, says Campbell-Brown. "It not uncommon for these things to hit, what is less common is for them to hit during daytime and in populated areas," she said.
i see where your coming from but internet has still been at the fore front for 10 years + and i,ve still not seen as many incidents as are getting reported today.
originally posted by: Soylent Green Is People
originally posted by: sparky31
not surprised,if you go to neo website there is a few close ones in next few days and what i,ve been noticing they seem to be getting more regular.
neo.jpl.nasa.gov...
I don't know if they are getting more regular, or if they had always been there and we just: a) have found more NEOs due to looking harder for them while using better equipment, and b) know more about the fireballs that do strike the atmosphere because of the instantaneous dissemination of information via the internet, plus the increased number of car dash cams and security cameras.
In the past (pre-internet), if a fireball went over some distant part of the world, the rest of the world would not really get the news like they do now through the internet. I'm sure meteor researchers would know about them, but the rest of us would not. Also, we see more videos of these meteors these days because there are exponentially more cameras around today than there was just 15 years ago.
I mean, do you really think the average person in the world (even as close as the U.S.) would have had any knowledge about this Toronto fireball if there was no internet or dash-cam footage?
And maybe the reason we have more NEOs tracked today that ever before could be that we just recently (in the past 10+ years or so) began to seriously track NEOs. In the past, there may have been just as many NEOs, but they went unnoticed and thus unknown.