And it is just blind luck they haven't destroyed a city. http://www.nbcnews.com/science/space/big-bangs-asteroids-strike-earth-more-often-we-think-n86281 Big Bangs: Asteroids Strike Earth More Often Than We Think EATTLE — Hurtling space rocks like the one that traced a blazing streak across the Russian sky last year pound Earth on a regular basis, according to new data from a system used to detect nuclear weapons explosions. And there’s no way to tell when the next one is coming. The bright flare of the Russian meteor was hard to miss, and left 1,200 people injured in February 2013. What the human eye missed was two separate high-altitude explosions that occurred over Argentina and the North Atlantic Ocean just months later. That’s according to data from an infrasound network used to track nuke tests, released Tuesday by the B612 Foundation. Right now, we can only know about these incoming asteroids after the fact, the foundation said. “Because we don’t know where or when the next major impact will occur, the only thing preventing a catastrophe from a ‘city-killer’-sized asteroid has been blind luck,” said B612 co-founder and CEO Ed Lu, a former NASA astronaut. The two blasts are among 26 explosions attributed to incoming asteroids since 2000, based on an analysis of data from the Comprehensive Nuclear Test Ban Treaty Organization's sensor network. None of the asteroids was detected in advance, and in most cases the explosions occurred too high up to have any impact on Earth. Nevertheless, their characteristic signals were registered by the CTBTO's network and analyzed by Peter Brown, a meteor researcher at Western University of Ontario. The B612 Foundation released Brown's findings, which are still undergoing review in advance of scientific publication, to support its campaign to build and launch an asteroid-hunting Sentinel Space Telescope. Lu was due to join Apollo 8 astronaut Bill Anders and former shuttle astronaut Tom Jones to discuss the project later Tuesday at Seattle's Museum of Flight. B612 also released a video visualization of the post-impact asteroid detections. Each of the 26 explosions gave off enough energy to equal the detonation of 1 kiloton or more of TNT. The Chelyabinsk blast was the biggest, at roughly 600 kilotons. In comparison, the nuclear blast that devastated Hiroshima in 1945 was 12 kilotons. Blasts attracted attention In addition to Chelyabinsk, three other explosions were recorded with an estimated energy release greater than 20 kilotons — over the Mediterranean Sea in 2002, the Southern Ocean in 2004, and Indonesia in 2009. Witnesses marveled at the 50-kiloton Indonesian meteor blast, and at the time, some experts said it was the biggest object to hit Earth in more than a decade. The 2002 Mediterranean blast occurred during a face-off between India and Pakistan over the disputed Kashmir region. U.S. military officials said that if the asteroid had entered Earth's atmosphere a few hours earlier, it might have touched off a nuclear war. Yet another explosion on the B612 list attracted attention in 2012, when a meteor streaked through the skies over Nevada and California. That asteroid breakup released 5 kilotons of energy, experts said. Although the Chelyabinsk meteor was the only one on the list to cause damage, Lu said in a statement that the infrasound data suggested asteroid impacts are "three to 10 times more common than we previously thought." "Because we don't know where or when the next major impact will occur, the only thing preventing a catastrophe from a 'city-killer'-sized asteroid has been blind luck," Lu said. How big is the problem? The most recent example of an asteroid impact capable of wiping out a city is the Tunguska blast of 1908, which released on the order of 5,000 to 20,000 kilotons of energy (5 to 20 megatons). Fortunately, that asteroid blew up over Siberian forest land instead of a populated area, flattening 500,000 acres of trees but causing no known injuries. Experts say nearly all of the near-Earth asteroids big enough to wipe out civilization have been detected and are being tracked — but add that they've spotted only a small percentage of an estimated million smaller asteroids that are nevertheless capable of causing damage. B612 is seeking to raise several hundred million dollars to put the Sentinel Space Telescope into an orbit that would detect far more such asteroids. Launch is currently planned for 2018. NASA budgets about $40 million annually for asteroid detection, and in advance of Tuesday's news briefing, some scientists have been debating how much more money needs to be spent. "We are doing plenty, spending more money to do more is silly, and usually justified by fear mongering. ... Once-a-century events with no more consequence than the worst hurricane each year seem unworthy of our worry or investment," Caltech astronomer Michael Brown said Monday in a series of Twitter updates. <iframe src="//player.vimeo.com/video/92478179" width="500" height="281" webkitallowfullscreen mozallowfullscreen allowfullscreen></iframe>
<iframe width="560" height="315" src="//www.youtube.com/embed/_EcjeFqxv6Y" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe> Russia got hit again a few days ago.
LOL...That's the first fat astronaut I've ever seen!...and what's Batman doing there?...:grin: ....... ....... .......
Why the insult Bonzi? I thought you and I were tight? This movie is from the last century/millenium! Believe me if this was a true "Armageddon" and these guys were our last hope, I would of already put a bullet in my head! (figuratively speaking of course)... ....... ....... .......
Lol no insult I was just taken aback at the thought of YOU of all people not knowing. I will be able to rest easy tonight. :grin:
I've been preaching about this possibility here for years. In fact, it's one of the few things I've started threads about. In my humble opinion, this one issue (and we are talking about the safety of possibly millions, and even the extinction of the human race) that cries out for a robust capability to be able to send astronauts not only in low Earth orbit, not only within the orbit of the Moon, but beyond. We have that capability already. We just need to spend the necessary money. What is more important? Not much, in my opinion.