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Originally posted by wonderboy2402
Originally posted by Helious
Russian meteorite 1,000 times bigger than originally thought Read more: www.foxnews.com...
www.foxnews.com
(visit the link for the full news article)
Later in the evening, after studying infrasound data from stations around the world, NASA released a new estimate revising that first guess upward by a thousand-fold: The meteorite actually weighed closer to 10,000 tons, scientists said.
Read more: www.foxnews.com...
edit on 19-2-2013 by Helious because: (no reason given)
Foxnews huh. Somehow I need more evidence.
Originally posted by Zcustosmorum
It truly is frightening stuff that this got through undetected, what if it was bigger still?
www.liveleak.com...
Originally posted by Zcustosmorum
It truly is frightening stuff that this got through undetected, what if it was bigger still?
www.liveleak.com...
Originally posted by NeoVain
reply to post by Helious
1000 times bigger than originally thought? And they say 15 meters in diameters? That would mean they originally thought it was 1.5 cm big. It seems they where originally very dumb, or something doesn´t smell right here.
Well. My only real question is where is this 10000 tonnes of debris?
What if..... this 10000 tonne rock had 400 tonnes of highly radioactive material embedded in it? What if that material was evenly distributed all over that certain area in Russia. What if that was a demonstration of "catching an asteroid"
Originally posted by Deny777
Weird. According to my calculations, if the initial figure for a 15m radius is correct, the volume in cubic centimeters would be:
(4 / 3) * 3.14159265358979 * (1500 ^ 3) = 14137 million cubic centimeters
Then according to this page, the density of a stony/iron meteorite is around 4.25 g/cm3 (Mesosiderite), so:
14137 * 4.25 = 60000 tons. That's quite a stretch for error margin isn't it? Unless a) the size/type of the meteorite is different than initially thought and/or b) the official weight calculation is still wrong.
Also if this was 60000 tons and Tunguska was 100000 tons, why such different outcomes?
edit on 20/2/2013 by Deny777 because: (no reason given)
Originally posted by Helious
wouldn't something with that much mass and traveling at such a high velocity create a large crater instead of almost completely evaporating before hitting the surface?