*[1] A small asteroid about 3 feet (1 meter) in size disintegrated harmlessly over Germany on Sunday, Jan. 21, at 1:32 a.m. local time (CET). At 95 minutes before it impacted Earth’s atmosphere, NASA’s Scout impact hazard assessment system, which monitors data on potential asteroid discoveries, gave advance warning as to where and when the asteroid would impact.
*[2] This is the eighth time in history that a small Earth-bound asteroid has been detected while still in space, before entering and disintegrating in our atmosphere.
*[3] The asteroid’s impact produced a bright fireball, or bolide, which was seen from as far away as the Czech Republic and may have scattered small meteorites on the ground at the impact site about 37 miles (60 kilometers) west of Berlin.
I'm not sure how I feel about 95 minutes warning [1], had it been larger would there be more warning or would that be the alert time had it been heading for (say) Berlin.
I'd be interested in knowing how many were missed during the time they had advance warning for the eight seen [2].
[3] Damascus Sky Iron!!
very probably small pebble sized and smaller pieces that mostly would be hard to find
Do we know how fast those small meteorites are travelling when they hit the ground? Are they like bullets or more like snowflakes?
Here’s a recent one: https://abcnews.go.com/US/scientists-confirm-meteorite-crash...
It pierced the roof but didn’t pierce the floor.
...but fortunately the asteroid was in the news a few days ago, so I correctly predicted (ha!) that they are referring to that one.
“ The asteroid 2024 BX1 was first observed less than three hours before its impact by Krisztián Sárneczky at Piszkéstető Mountain Station of the Konkoly Observatory near Budapest, Hungary.”
“(Scout) automatically fetched the new data from that page, deducing the object’s possible trajectory and chances of impacting Earth.”
Equally unsettling - it was about 1 meter in diameter and the fireball was visible from large swathes of north Germany, there are numerous videos.
Unless its coated in Martian stealth technology...
Beltalowda
for a 1m meteorite:
mass = 4/3 * pi * 0.5^3 * 8000 = 4188 kg
area = 2 * pi * 0.5^3 = 0.78 m
The defaults for density and drag coefficient are fine enough. And we get a result of at least 500m/s, assuming air resistance is sufficient to slow it down to terminal velocity. The exact number will vary quite a lot - especially as this is for a whole meter sized meteorite that doesn't disintegrate, but this is at least a reasonable ballpark. So the tl/dr would be: more like a bullet, but with somewhere around 140,000 times the kinetic energy, for a 1m meteorite.
[1] - https://www.gigacalculator.com/calculators/terminal-velocity...
One nitpick here - meteors aren't called meteorites until they hit the surface.