APOD: Asteroid 2012 DA14 Passes the Earth (2013 Feb 17)

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Expand view Topic review: APOD: Asteroid 2012 DA14 Passes the Earth (2013 Feb 17)

Re: APOD: Asteroid 2012 DA14 Passes the Earth (2013 Feb 17)

by rstevenson » Thu Feb 21, 2013 7:59 pm

ta152h0 wrote:There was a mention of a camera shake by one observer of the asteroid fly by. Is it possible to measure the distance of a background star by measuring the amplitude of the shake of a nearby object and compare the amplitute of the shake on a far away object and just bdo the math ? Couldn't be that simple , could it ?
The baseline you get from camera shake isn't quite big enough. :shock:

In order to measure distances to stars using parallax, we use a baseline "shake" of about 300,000,000 km. In other words, using a ground-based telescope we take a picture of a part of the sky, then wait six months for the Earth to "shake" over to the other side of its orbit, from where we take a picture of the same piece of sky. When we compare the two pictures we can see that nearer stars have moved against the essentially unmoving background stars. This technique allows us to measure distances to relatively nearby stars, less than 100 light years away. Wikipedia says...
Space astrometry for parallax

In 1989, the satellite Hipparcos was launched primarily for obtaining parallaxes and proper motions of nearby stars, increasing the reach of the method tenfold. Even so, Hipparcos is only able to measure parallax angles for stars up to about 1,600 light-years away, a little more than one percent of the diameter of the Milky Way Galaxy. The European Space Agency's Gaia mission, due to launch in 2013, will be able to measure parallax angles to an accuracy of 10 microarcseconds, thus mapping nearby stars (and potentially planets) up to a distance of tens of thousands of light-years from earth.
Rob

[And now, using 20/20 parallax, I can see that both Art and Chris have already answered the question. Yeah, but my answer has a longer baseline.]

Re: APOD: Asteroid 2012 DA14 Passes the Earth (2013 Feb 17)

by Chris Peterson » Thu Feb 21, 2013 3:38 pm

ta152h0 wrote:There was a mention of a camera shake by one observer of the asteroid fly by. Is it possible to measure the distance of a background star by measuring the amplitude of the shake of a nearby object and compare the amplitute of the shake on a far away object and just bdo the math ? Couldn't be that simple , could it ?
No, it couldn't be that simple. The amplitude of motion will be instrumentally identical for all the objects, since they are effectively point sources at infinity. Of course, if you were close enough to the foreground object, it might appear to have a different amplitude than the stars, but every star would seem to be the the same distance... infinity.

In essence, we do use "camera shake" to figure out how far away nearer stars are. We can measure parallax, but we "shake" the camera by imaging at diametrical points in Earth's orbit. In essence, we shake the camera with a 2 AU amplitude.

Re: APOD: Asteroid 2012 DA14 Passes the Earth (2013 Feb 17)

by neufer » Thu Feb 21, 2013 3:36 pm

ta152h0 wrote:
There was a mention of a camera shake by one observer of the asteroid fly by. Is it possible to measure the distance of a background star by measuring the amplitude of the shake of a nearby object and compare the amplitute of the shake on a far away object and just bdo the math ? Couldn't be that simple , could it ?
This is called parallax and it generally involves the "shaking" of the Earth from side to side during its orbit around the sun.

Thankfully, the camera wasn't shaking quite that violently.

Re: APOD: Asteroid 2012 DA14 Passes the Earth (2013 Feb 17)

by ta152h0 » Thu Feb 21, 2013 3:30 pm

There was a mention of a camera shake by one observer of the asteroid fly by. Is it possible to measure the distance of a background star by measuring the amplitude of the shake of a nearby object and compare the amplitute of the shake on a far away object and just bdo the math ? Couldn't be that simple , could it ?

Re: APOD: Asteroid 2012 DA14 Passes the Earth (2013 Feb 17)

by Chris Peterson » Thu Feb 21, 2013 3:13 pm

Steve Randall wrote:Does the asteroid seem to be spinning? Maybe 2 or 3 revs/second? Did anyone do an FFT on luminosity or something?
All asteroids are spinning, and most are spinning on more than one axis (tumbling).

Re: APOD: Asteroid 2012 DA14 Passes the Earth (2013 Feb 17)

by neufer » Thu Feb 21, 2013 3:03 pm

Click to play embedded YouTube video.
Steve Randall wrote:
Does the asteroid seem to be spinning?
Maybe 2 or 3 revs/second?
2012 DA14 is not only spinning...it is tumbling wildly.

http://www2.eng.cam.ac.uk/~hemh/rigid_body.htm

However, remember that you are observing time lapse
sped up ~300 times so definitely not at "2 or 3 revs/second."

Re: APOD: Asteroid 2012 DA14 Passes the Earth (2013 Feb 17)

by Steve Randall » Thu Feb 21, 2013 11:29 am

Does the asteroid seem to be spinning? Maybe 2 or 3 revs/second? Did anyone do an FFT on luminosity or something?

I'm ready for my closeup, Mr. DA Mille.

by neufer » Tue Feb 19, 2013 9:26 pm

Re: APOD: Asteroid 2012 DA14 Passes the Earth (2013 Feb 17)

by fercapa » Tue Feb 19, 2013 6:18 pm

Hello. This was my observation. I lost the asteroid in some moments because I was showing it in a public observation and left the camera alone... :(

Watch it better at HD and fullscreen. And even better downloading original file from http://vimeo.com/59956839

Re: APOD: Asteroid 2012 DA14 Passes the Earth (2013 Feb 17)

by neufer » Mon Feb 18, 2013 8:12 pm

Chris Peterson wrote:
ta152h0 wrote:
I remember the 1972 meteor that famously, and lucky for us was photographed by an amateur , streaked ove a lake. I don't remember reading about a shock wave in Scientific American at the time. Maybe it was going too slow. I do remember reading it came back for a final visit.
That was the Grand Teton meteor. It was an Earth grazer, meaning it only dipped into the upper atmosphere. It was far too high for any audible acoustic energy to reach the ground. In all likelihood it was smaller and less massive than the body that exploded over Russia. Based on its orbital elements (as modified by its 1972 encounter with the Earth) it should have returned quite close to the Earth in 1997, but it was not detected.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grand_Teton_Meteor wrote:
<<The 1972 Great Daylight Fireball (or US19720810) was an Earth-grazing meteoroid that passed within 57 kilometres of the surface of the Earth at 20:29 UTC on August 10, 1972. It entered the Earth's atmosphere at 15 kilometres per second in daylight over Utah, United States (14:30 local time) and passed northwards leaving the atmosphere over Alberta, Canada. It was seen by many people and recorded on film and by space-borne sensors. Analysis of its appearance and trajectory showed it was a meteoroid about 3 metres in diameter, if a carbonaceous chondrite, to 14 metres, if made of cometary ices. It was in the Apollo asteroid class in an Earth-crossing orbit that would make a subsequent close approach to Earth in August 1997. In 1994, Czech astronomer Zdenek Ceplecha re-analysed the data and suggested the passage would have reduced the meteoroid's mass to about a third or half of its original mass. The meteoroid's 100-second passage through the atmosphere reduced its velocity by about 800 metres per second and the whole encounter significantly changed its orbital inclination from 15 degrees to 8 degrees. If it had not entered at such a grazing angle, this meteoroid would have lost all its velocity in the upper atmosphere, possibly ending in an airburst, and any remnant would have struck Earth at terminal velocity.>>
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Hammer_of_God wrote:
Image
<<The 1972 Great Daylight Fireball (or US19720810) meteoroid is described in the preface of the first chapter of Arthur C. Clarke's The Hammer of God.

The Hammer of God is a science fiction novel by Arthur C. Clarke originally published in 1993. A good portion of the book details the life of spaceship-captain Robert Singh (including his running a marathon race on the Lunar surface and uprooting his life and moving to Mars). When it is discovered that the asteroid Kali is likely to hit Earth, Singh's ship Goliath makes an emergency voyage to Kali with a load of thrusters to set up on the asteroid, hopefully nudging the rock's orbit just enough to push it clear of Earth. In the meantime, a religious sect called Chrislam, originally founded by a female veteran of the Persian Gulf War, believes that they can convert a human being into a few terabytes of computer information, and then transmit this data across space to Sirius (where they believe aliens reside); members of the sect also come to believe that the asteroid is meant to destroy the Earth. They [Geckzilla, Owlice, Moonlady, Ann and Margarita] thus sneak a bomb on board the Goliath and ruin the thrusters. While Singh uses the Goliath itself as a thruster to move the asteroid, the world government on Earth rushes to reconstruct one of the planet's long-decommissioned nuclear weapons, hoping to break the peanut-shaped Kali in two.

While filmmaker Steven Spielberg optioned the rights to The Hammer of God for film production, the resultant movie, Deep Impact (1998), was dissimilar enough to the book that Clarke received no on-screen credit for the movie.>>
Arthur C. (The Glamor of Hog) Neuendorffer

Re: APOD: Asteroid 2012 DA14 Passes the Earth (2013 Feb 17)

by Chris Peterson » Mon Feb 18, 2013 7:41 pm

ta152h0 wrote:I remember the 1972 meteor that famously, and lucky for us was photographed by an amateur , streaked ove a lake. I don't remember reading about a shock wave in Scientific American at the time. Maybe it was going too slow. I do remember reading it came back for a final visit.
That was the Grand Teton meteor. It was an Earth grazer, meaning it only dipped into the upper atmosphere. It was far too high for any audible acoustic energy to reach the ground. In all likelihood it was smaller and less massive than the body that exploded over Russia. Based on its orbital elements (as modified by its 1972 encounter with the Earth) it should have returned quite close to the Earth in 1997, but it was not detected.

Re: APOD: Asteroid 2012 DA14 Passes the Earth (2013 Feb 17)

by ta152h0 » Mon Feb 18, 2013 7:25 pm

I remember the 1972 meteor that famously, and lucky for us was photographed by an amateur , streaked ove a lake. I don't remember reading about a shock wave in Scientific American at the time. Maybe it was going too slow. I do remember reading it came back for a final visit.

Re: APOD: Asteroid 2012 DA14 Passes the Earth (2013 Feb 17)

by Chris Peterson » Mon Feb 18, 2013 6:30 pm

cmflyer wrote:Getting both answers (see Art's answer above yours). The boom sounds like a classic double sonic-boom, and I agree with Art that the fragments seem to be making their own smaller sonic-booms. Perhaps the brightest flash corresponds with max-Q, which, assuming the velocity was down into the Mach 1 or 2 range by that time, would cause the main boom, create maximum heat, and shatter the object.
The parent body was still hypersonic when it exploded, or it would not be luminous. Ablation generally stops at about Mach 5. This body was still well above that.

Re: APOD: Asteroid 2012 DA14 Passes the Earth (2013 Feb 17)

by cmflyer » Mon Feb 18, 2013 6:20 pm

Chris Peterson wrote:
cmflyer wrote:2. Was the shockwave experienced in Russia a result of the object ramming through air hypersonically, or from it exploding, or both?
Primarily from the explosion. When the object fragmented, a huge surface area was exposed to ablation, superheating a large volume of air (a cylinder because of the motion of the bodies). This is the primary source of the shockwave. There were secondary shockwaves created by the smaller pieces, but these were much lower energy (you can hear them after the primary shock in some of the videos). At the disruption height of 27 km, most of the energy from the supersonic shock waves dissipated before reaching the ground.
Getting both answers (see Art's answer above yours). The boom sounds like a classic double sonic-boom, and I agree with Art that the fragments seem to be making their own smaller sonic-booms. Perhaps the brightest flash corresponds with max-Q, which, assuming the velocity was down into the Mach 1 or 2 range by that time, would cause the main boom, create maximum heat, and shatter the object.

Re: APOD: Asteroid 2012 DA14 Passes the Earth (2013 Feb 17)

by Chris Peterson » Mon Feb 18, 2013 5:53 pm

neufer wrote:Detection technologies for objects less than about 100 meters make good sense:
Agreed, however for the most part this is achieved by monitoring meteors, not searching for meteoroids. Very few resources are dedicated to detecting such bodies while they are in space, because the value of such data is quite limited.

Re: APOD: Asteroid 2012 DA14 Passes the Earth (2013 Feb 17)

by neufer » Mon Feb 18, 2013 5:39 pm

Chris Peterson wrote:
Developing detection and deflection technology makes good sense, but probably only for objects larger than about 100 meters.
Detection technologies for objects less than about 100 meters make good sense:
  • 1) To provide better statistics on how often such events occur.
    2) To give folks in populated land regions a heads up.
    3) To assist fresh meteorite searchers in unpopulated land regions.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Almahata_Sitta#Recovered_fragments_.28Almahata_Sitta_meteorite.29 wrote:
<<2008 TC3 (Catalina Sky Survey temporary designation 8TA9D69) was a meteoroid 2 to 5 meters in diameter and weighing 80 tonnes, that entered Earth's atmosphere on October 7, 2008, at 02:46 UTC (05:46 local time). The meteoroid was notable as the first such body to be observed and tracked prior to reaching Earth. It exploded an estimated 37 kilometers above the Nubian Desert in Sudan. A search of the impact zone that began on December 2008 turned up 10.5 kilograms of meteorites in 600 fragments, which are surviving pieces of the meteoroid. The meteorites are of a rare type known as ureilites [Not to be confused with Uralites], which contain, among other minerals, nanodiamonds.>>

Re: APOD: Asteroid 2012 DA14 Passes the Earth (2013 Feb 17)

by Chris Peterson » Mon Feb 18, 2013 4:29 pm

mjimih wrote:Wow thank goodness, because from an elevation almost three times the height of Mt Everest, it was still easily capable of busting out glass over a large area. I'd say we really need to become experts at deflecting these "startlingly powerful" pebbles asap. Friday was about as stark a reminder of just how small we are as I can think of. I mean two big rocks on the same day too! Amazing. We need to build machines now that can be readily used on very short notice.
Bill Nye on the need for deflection technology (a ten year plan)
Objects like that over Russia are not a significant threat. They are not uncommon, and usually go largely unnoticed. It was very unusual for such a small body as this to descend so deeply before breaking apart, and bad luck that it did so directly over a population center. In practice, it is very unlikely that we would even concern ourselves with objects in this size range, as doing so would consume vast resources with virtually no gain. Even DA14 would be unlikely to cause much damage if it hit the Earth.

Developing detection and deflection technology makes good sense, but probably only for objects larger than about 100 meters.

Re: APOD: Asteroid 2012 DA14 Passes the Earth (2013 Feb 17)

by mjimih » Mon Feb 18, 2013 3:50 pm

Chris Peterson wrote:
cmflyer wrote:... but these were much lower energy (you can hear them after the primary shock in some of the videos). At the disruption height of 27 km, most of the energy from the supersonic shock waves dissipated before reaching the ground.
Wow thank goodness, because from an elevation almost three times the height of Mt Everest, it was still easily capable of busting out glass over a large area. I'd say we really need to become experts at deflecting these "startlingly powerful" pebbles asap. Friday was about as stark a reminder of just how small we are as I can think of. I mean two big rocks on the same day too! Amazing. We need to build machines now that can be readily used on very short notice.
Bill Nye on the need for deflection technology (a ten year plan);
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0QhvLTgcEAg

Re: APOD: Asteroid 2012 DA14 Passes the Earth (2013 Feb 17)

by rstevenson » Mon Feb 18, 2013 2:23 pm

Steve Dutch wrote:... The smallest nukes overlap the largest chemical explosions, but we've never set off tens of thousands of tons of explosive at once. ...
Not deliberately. But the Halifax Explosion of Dec. 6th, 1917 was a pretty big bang. The French ship Mont-Blanc, which was loaded with 2,300 tons of wet and dry picric acid, 200 tons of TNT, 10 tons of gun cotton and 35 tons of benzol, collided with the Norwegian vessel SS Imo in the narrows of Halifax harbour. The blast resulted in about 2000 dead and a further 9000 injured. From Wikipedia...
Until the Trinity test that led to the development of the atomic bomb, it was the largest man-made explosion in recorded history with an equivalent force of roughly 2.9 kilotons of Trinitrotoluene (TNT). In a meeting of the Royal Society of Canada in May 1918, Dalhousie University's Professor Howard L. Bronson estimated the blast at some 2.4 million kilograms of high explosive.
Considering how startlingly powerful the comparitively small blast in Russia a couple of days ago seems in the many videos we have of it, it's quite difficult to comprehend what it must have been like in Halifax and Dartmouth on that terrible day in 1917.

Rob

Re: APOD: Asteroid 2012 DA14 Passes the Earth (2013 Feb 17)

by Chris Peterson » Mon Feb 18, 2013 5:52 am

Steve Dutch wrote:Bottom line is the difference between an estimate of 300 kT and 500 kT is not worth discussing. Even less do we know the exact energy of the Chesapeake Bay or Sudbury impacts. Order of magnitude is about it.
You are mistaken. The energy can be calculated quite accurately by looking at the signal from microbarometers, of which there is a worldwide array. In addition, the energy can be calculated from the light curve if it was accurately recorded by one of the DOD monitoring satellites (which it almost certainly was, although that information may not be released publicly).

There is a standard conversion between joules and kilotons of TNT. Because the dynamics of the energy release are different between a meteor and a nuclear bomb, it is somewhat inaccurate to compare a 500 kT energy meteor event to a 500 kT nuclear explosion. But the 500 kT value itself is quite accurate- probably to better than 10%- as a measure of the total energy released.

Re: APOD: Asteroid 2012 DA14 Passes the Earth (2013 Feb 17)

by Chris Peterson » Mon Feb 18, 2013 5:47 am

cmflyer wrote:2. Was the shockwave experienced in Russia a result of the object ramming through air hypersonically, or from it exploding, or both?
Primarily from the explosion. When the object fragmented, a huge surface area was exposed to ablation, superheating a large volume of air (a cylinder because of the motion of the bodies). This is the primary source of the shockwave. There were secondary shockwaves created by the smaller pieces, but these were much lower energy (you can hear them after the primary shock in some of the videos). At the disruption height of 27 km, most of the energy from the supersonic shock waves dissipated before reaching the ground.

Re: APOD: Asteroid 2012 DA14 Passes the Earth (2013 Feb 17)

by Chris Peterson » Mon Feb 18, 2013 5:41 am

alter-ego wrote:The details of how much energy reaches the ground is complicated by power dissipation along the air column before disruption...
This applies to much more massive bodies than the one over Russia. For such a small body as that, the dynamics are much simpler. Had it been just a bit faster, or just a bit steeper, it's likely that there would have been no significant shock wave at the ground.

Re: APOD: Asteroid 2012 DA14 Passes the Earth (2013 Feb 17)

by neufer » Mon Feb 18, 2013 4:24 am

cmflyer wrote:
1. Is today's APOD video in real time?
As it indicates, it is 106 minutes in 19 seconds (or about 335 times normal speed).
cmflyer wrote:
2. Was the shockwave experienced in Russia a result of the object ramming through air hypersonically, or from it exploding, or both?
The shockwave was the result of numerous objects ramming through air hypersonically after the meteor rapidly disintegrated into many fragments. It is really the only efficient means for the initial kinetic energy of a stony asteroid to be transformed into "airburst" energy.

Code: Select all

Airburst estimates for a stony asteroid with a diameter ranging from 30 to 85 meters

Diameter 	Kinetic energy 	Airburst energy    Airburst altitude 	Average frequency
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
30 m  	  	   708 kt	   		 530 kt  		    16.1 km  		    185 years
50 m  	  	   3.3 Mt 		 	  2.9 Mt 		      8.5 km 	   	  764 years
85 m         	16.1 Mt 		  	15.6 Mt 		     0.435 km	  	  3300 years

Re: APOD: Asteroid 2012 DA14 Passes the Earth (2013 Feb 17)

by cmflyer » Mon Feb 18, 2013 3:49 am

Two questions:
1. Is today's APOD video in real time?
2. Was the shockwave experienced in Russia a result of the object ramming through air hypersonically, or from it exploding, or both?

Thanks All, great discussions!

Re: APOD: Asteroid 2012 DA14 Passes the Earth (2013 Feb 17)

by Steve Dutch » Mon Feb 18, 2013 3:30 am

The California meteor is a run of the mill bolide, maybe the size of a marble, that you can see every week or so from any place on earth if you wait long enough.

One site is making a big to do about the yield of the Russian meteor being raised from 300 to 500 kt. When it comes to the calories in a jelly donut, you can burn it in a bomb calorimeter, measure the temperature rise of the surrounding water, and determine the energy. You can use an electric heater to heat water, measure the temperature rise, and relate electrical and chemical energy scales. It's a little hard to enclose a nuke in a calorimeter. We do know the blast effects of large chemical explosions, and we know the energy released in the chemical reactions, and the blast effects follow scaling laws. Typically the energy is proportional to the volume of the effect, or the cube root of the radius. The smallest nukes overlap the largest chemical explosions, but we've never set off tens of thousands of tons of explosive at once. We estimate the yield of very large nukes from blast effects, scaling up from smaller explosions. But blast effects depend on the setting. Who wants us to set off lots of nukes at 20 km to calibrate the Russian event? Thought so.

Bottom line is the difference between an estimate of 300 kT and 500 kT is not worth discussing. Even less do we know the exact energy of the Chesapeake Bay or Sudbury impacts. Order of magnitude is about it.

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