Some fascinating footage.However, NASA astronomer Don Yeomans, who leads the space agency's Near-Earth Object Program Office, has repeatedly said that asteroid 2012 DA14 poses no threat to the Earth no, or in the foreseeable future.
-Where was Don for this one? I wonder, was it too small for the Near-Earth Object program to detect? Seems a warning to the population of the projected target area might have been warranted.
It might not have been a NEO. It could have been a tiny long period commet for all we know on it's way to the sun. Objects are pretty hard to detect in space, especially ones with irregular orbits or long-period objects of this size. We simply don't have the number of tools we need to detect ALL objects of this nature. I doubt they were even aware of this particular object.
Thanks for the insight, I appreciate it. It sounds like we are more vulnerable than we ought to be. We need more people/infrastructure dedicated to watching out for such things. If they had detected it, would there have been enough advanced warning to clear people out of the target area?
Completely depends on how far ahead we got notice. Most objects we should be able to detect well ahead of time from other close passes, and then we just know in blank years it will be back along this place where the Earth crosses. But with long-period objects, we really can't do that. Long period objects come from the kuiper belt or even further out from the oort cloud. Think like Haley's or Hale-Bopp Comets. Some of those only come into the inner solar system once a lifetime, some we only see once. Those make predicting objects very difficult, because if we don't see it coming the first time, that might be the only chance we have. I'm sure they can invent/create devices that would scan the sky automatically and look for movements, but they would need a lot of them, and they would need to be dedicated to the task of finding these objects. Place them at various lagrange points, as well as a few leading and following the Earth around the sun. Right now many telescopes and devices used for looking for NEOs aren't dedicated, they are "shared science projects". So one week they might be looking for Earth killing asteroids, the next week another team might be using them to study pulsars.If they had detected it, would there have been enough advanced warning to clear people out of the target area?
Looks like part of it at least impacted at a zinc factory. http://wattsupwiththat.com/2013/02/14/large-meteor-in-russia.../ EDIT: This was debunked. It was just shockwave damage as well. Sounds like the meteor pieces hit outside the town in a lake and they are investigating and attempting to recover.
Mostly from shattered glass from what I understand. The shockwave blew out windows everywhere sending shards flying. On the drive in I heard that over 700 people have been injured, which is jaw dropping. The odds of this happening over such a densely populated area are so low....but of course they go up over time.