Astronomers Catch Asteroid Striking Moon On Video
spineas writes "A 4.5-foot-wide asteroid struck the moon in September 2013, and astronomers were lucky enough to catch the impact flash on video, now confirmed as the brightest ever witnessed from Earth. The Orlando Sentinel reports that the asteroid likely weighed nearly 900 pounds, and exploded on impact with the moon with the force of 15 tons of TNT."
Thanks for taking one for the team.
The film just got mailed back to them from the camera shop.
If Slashdot were chemistry it would look like this:Cadaverine
Another day older and deeper in debt..
“He’s not deformed, he’s just drunk!”
My bookmark has said http://slashdot.org/?nobeta=1 since before the Slashcott.
...when an asteroid struck the moon
So the sky IS falling? Apparently it is on the moon...
"File to fit, pound to insert, paint to match" - Aircraft Maintenance 101
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v...
At the bright side though...
It seems backwards that a scientific organisation still uses the archaic units of feet, pounds and miles when describing an event such as this.
Japanese company plans solar plant on moon
Asteroid hits moon with energy of nuclear bomb dropped on Hiroshima
They didn't prepare taps and cameras. Asteroid please, can strike again?
Considering the priorities in the news media today, I hope they don't name the crater Bieber...
Video of it striking something?
How about Alec Baldwin?
The video is almost five minutes long and mostly computer animations. Actual footage of the moon can be found in three segments:
2:13 - 2:23 Examples of previous impact flashes
3:00 - 3:08 Full-speed MIDAS video of the big flash
3:20 - 3:30 Slow motion MIDAS video of the big flash
Visit the
Why in Science name do You use two different units of mass in the same sentence?
...Why this impact apparently emitted so much light?
I get that the asteroid probably had a LOT of kinetic energy, but isn't it only in "Hollywood physics" that when two inert things collide you get a fiery explosion? .... and I'm even more surprised as it took place in a vacuum where my limetd understanding of conventional physics says fire cant happen...
trollface.jpg
lose != loose
I believe that this was seen in historical times from Earth hundreds of years ago. I think it was seen with the naked eye so was a much larger strike.
well, an impact on the Moon visible from earth is of interest. What about any of the seismological instruments on the moon?
Will we get a free internal structure mapping from the shock waves? or is the instrumentation not there? If not, why not?
Oh Yeah - FU#* Beta! and get off my lawn!
That was an American Nuclear Tipped Missile destroying one of the Grey Alien Moon bases on the moon....
Zoom in and enhance! :P
Ant(Dude) @ Quality Foraged Links (AQFL.net) & The Ant Farm (antfarm.ma.cx / antfarm.home.dhs.org).
What are you talking about? The summary has links in Beta.
When our name is on the back of your car, we're behind you all the way!
there were two flashes how you explain that
I thought *Real* meteors only came in meters and weighed kilos, not pounds. At least the crater was metric.
I wonder if such a meagre impact has an measurable effect on the moon distance from the earth in the long run. I tend to recall that due to various forces, the moon is slowly escaping Earth's gravity, but maybe by happenstance, events like this just give this tiny nudge that puts it back in track.
"The hallmark of humanity is the ability to move beyond sensory inputs" - Mary Helen Immordino-Yang
Coincidentally I was watching Carl Sagan's Cosmos Episode 4 last night and he talked about several credible eye witness accounts recorded by the Gervase of Canterbury where an impact on the moon was so bright that it was seen at dusk and generated a very large and visible plume, much much larger in size and longer in duration than that brief flash the MIDAS program reported about. You'll have to watch Episode 4 to learn what impact crater astronomers were able to match these accounts against, but it was a ray crater positioned on the moon consistent with the eye witness accounts.