The meteorite is on Twitter. We can't verify whether or not this is the actual meteorite or a parody account.
This says, "Meteors only fall once. I've already fallen. I cannot fall again."
This says, "Meteors only fall once. I've already fallen. I cannot fall again."
@dzhalik10 метеориты падают один раз. Я уже упал. Еще раз не могу.
— Che_meteorit (@Che_meteorit) February 15, 2013
From the Russian Academy of Sciences (article in RU):
The object was "a few meters" across, but weighed around 10 tons and had a total energy of "a few kilotons." It entered the atmosphere at a speed of 15-20 km/second and broke up an altitude of 30-50 kilometers.
The object was "a few meters" across, but weighed around 10 tons and had a total energy of "a few kilotons." It entered the atmosphere at a speed of 15-20 km/second and broke up an altitude of 30-50 kilometers.
How often does Earth experience the kind of meteorite strike that just hit Russia? @megangarber knows: theatln.tc/VYQngS
— J.J. Gould (@jj_gould) February 15, 2013
"99 percent of the time" scientists have no idea that large asteroids that could hit earth are coming. rendezvous.blogs.nytimes.com/2013/02/15/ear…
— Christopher Mims (@mims) February 15, 2013
A few local fisherman got a bit of a surprise on a lake near Chelyabinsk. Lifenews.ru heads out there (w/non-embeddable video)
We are going to slow down coverage on the live blog. There will still be an interview or two as well as more reactions from Russia posted, but not at the pace of what we did in the morning as events unfolded. Thanks to everyone for watching, reading, and sending their videos. -- RFE/RL's web team
Sergei Smirnov, a senior astronomer at the Central Astronomical Observatory of the Russian Academy of Sciences in Pulkovo near St. Petersburg, during a live interview with Russian state television, Rossia 24.
Smirnov was asked if there was a link between the Chelyabinsk meteorite and the approaching asteroid 2012 DA 14, which was expected to skim the Earth later on Friday:
"It is clear now that they had different orbits and their orbital planes were inclined considerably. The asteroid that we expect in a few hours is approaching the Earth from the Southern Hemisphere side, in other words its general trajectory lies from south to north, while the Chelyabinsk bolide came from east to west."
Smirnov was also asked whether it had been possible to foresee the appearance of the meteorite:
"Unfortunately the object was not big enough to be detected ahead of time by currently available means at a long distance but big enough to cause a lot of destruction after it broke through toward the Earth."
Smirnov was asked if there was a link between the Chelyabinsk meteorite and the approaching asteroid 2012 DA 14, which was expected to skim the Earth later on Friday:
"It is clear now that they had different orbits and their orbital planes were inclined considerably. The asteroid that we expect in a few hours is approaching the Earth from the Southern Hemisphere side, in other words its general trajectory lies from south to north, while the Chelyabinsk bolide came from east to west."
Smirnov was also asked whether it had been possible to foresee the appearance of the meteorite:
"Unfortunately the object was not big enough to be detected ahead of time by currently available means at a long distance but big enough to cause a lot of destruction after it broke through toward the Earth."
Reuters: The spectacle deeply frightened many Russians, with some elderly women declaring that the world was coming to an end.
NASA statement on Russian meteor:
"According to NASA scientists, the trajectory of the Russian meteorite was significantly different than the trajectory of the asteroid 2012 DA14, making it a completely unrelated object. Information is still being collected about the Russian meteorite and analysis is preliminary at this point. In videos of the meteor, it is seen to pass from left to right in front of the rising sun, which means it was traveling from north to south. Asteroid DA14's trajectory is in the opposite direction, from south to north."
The Moscow Times:
"By early afternoon, several websites were already selling "fragments of meteorite."
"I'm selling it because it's useless to me. There are several scratch marks, but in general it's in excellent condition," wrote one Internet user calling himself Alexei and claiming to be from Magnitogorsk in the Chelyabinsk region.