Today a large object entered the Earth’s atmosphere above the Chelyabinsk region within Russia's Ural Mountains. The object left a streak across the sky as it burned through the atmosphere and eventually exploded. The force of the explosion, thousands of feet above the Earth's surface, was Some of the pieces landed on Earth and left small craters. Did you know that some 30,000,000 pounds of space “stuff” come to Earth each year? A lot of that is in tiny objects that we don’t see or even know about. Every once in a while there is a larger object that comes down. Today’s object has been described as a “large” object and I even heard one report that the object was bus size. First question, was it an asteroid or a meteoroid? Well, the difference in space has to do with the size. Meteoroids are defined as space objects up to 1 meter in diameter and Asteroids are those that are larger than one meter in diameter and within the orbit of Jupiter (closer to the sun than Jupiter). So my guess is that it was an asteroid. There are tens of thousands of asteroids and uncountable meteoroids in the solar system. So why did they call it a meteor today if it was big enough to be an asteroid? Well, there are different names for the different locations that these live. When the objects are in space, they are either asteroids or meteoroids. But once they enter Earth’s atmosphere and start burning up (that’s what causes the smoke trail in the day or the burning line of light across the sky at night) then they become meteors. And once they land, they are generally referred to as meteorites. How fast are these objects going when they hit the Earth? Well, they are travelling through space at anywhere from 20,000 miles per hour to as much as 100,000 miles per hour. When they hit our atmosphere the speed of the object compresses the air in front of it until the air has been compressed to such an extent that the gases in our atmosphere are heated to over 3,000 degrees Fahrenheit. Many of you will have stuck a hand out a car window in the summer and felt the air going by at 60 miles per hour. Well, if you were to speed up really fast, then the air gets thicker where it hits your hand and before it has a chance to move around the sides. Now imagine going 20,000 miles an hour, that air gets compressed (squished) so much that it heats up to the thousands of degrees, which is hot enough to burn the material of most meteors. To learn more about all things space, try checking out some of these websites: Jordan Planetarium at UMaine in Orono http://www.galaxymaine.com/ Southworth Planetarium at USM in Portland http://www.usm.maine.edu/planet National Aeronautical and Space Administration (NASA) http://www.nasa.gov/
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We were watching the SuperBowl on Sunday and when the power went out at the Superdome. For the next 34 minutes the sportscasters talked about the game, the players, with occasional references to the power, mostly just to note that they'd been told it would be back on in so many minutes. But I realized I was far more interested in knowing things like... Why did the power go out? and How many people where in the stadium? and How much power does it take to run the SuperBowl, it's bigger than many cities. Or maybe How many engineers and technicians are working on the problem? What kind of lights are they that need so long to turn back on? Was it a substation that blew? We commented that they really needed an engineer to be on the set with the sportscasters so they could discuss all of these details. Bring in the specialists who could discuss the theories behind the issue. Where were the diagrams and graphics to help us understand? But I guess us engineers just have to take a back seat and read about it online the next day (which I did). |
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