Chelyabinsk Airburst, Damage Assessment, Meteorite Recovery, and Characterization / Popova Olga P.,Jenniskens Peter,Emel'yanenko Vacheslav,Kartashova Anna,Biryukov Eugeny,Khaibrakhmanov Sergey,Shuvalov Valery,Rybnov Yurij,Dudorov Alexandr,Grokhovsky Victor I.,Badyukov Dmitry D.,Yin Qing-Zhu,Gural Peter S.,Albers Jim,Granvik Mikael,Evers Laslo G.,Kuiper Jacob,Kharlamov Vladimir,Solovyov Andrey,Rusakov Yuri S.,Korotkiy Stanislav,Serdyuk Ilya,Korochantsev Alexander V.,Larionov Michail Yu.,Glazachev

ISSN/EISSN:
0036-8075 / 1095-9203
Type:
Article
Abstract:
The asteroid impact near the Russian city of Chelyabinsk on 15 February 2013 was the largest airburst on Earth since the 1908 Tunguska event, causing a natural disaster in an area with a population exceeding one million. Because it occurred in an era with modern consumer electronics, field sensors, and laboratory techniques, unprecedented measurements were made of the impact event and the meteoroid that caused it. Here, we document the account of what happened, as understood now, using comprehensive data obtained from astronomy, planetary science, geophysics, meteorology, meteoritics, and cosmochemistry and from social science surveys. A good understanding of the Chelyabinsk incident provides an opportunity to calibrate the event, with implications for the study of near-Earth objects and developing hazard mitigation strategies for planetary protection.
Author keywords:
ORDINARY CHONDRITES; ASTEROIDS; FAMILY; EARTH; METEOROIDS; PHOSPHATES; ITOKAWA; ORIGIN; FALLS
DOI:
10.1126/science.1242642
Web of Science ID:
ISI:000327518600050
Соавторы в МНС:
Другие поля
Поле Значение
Month NOV 29
Publisher AMER ASSOC ADVANCEMENT SCIENCE
Address 1200 NEW YORK AVE, NW, WASHINGTON, DC 20005 USA
Language English
EISSN 1095-9203
Keywords-Plus ORDINARY CHONDRITES; ASTEROIDS; FAMILY; EARTH; METEOROIDS; PHOSPHATES; ITOKAWA; ORIGIN; FALLS
Research-Areas Science \& Technology - Other Topics
Web-of-Science-Categories Multidisciplinary Sciences
Author-Email petrus.m.jenniskens@nasa.gov
ResearcherID-Numbers Soloviev, Andrey/P-1761-2014 Rowland, Douglas/F-3104-2014 Emel'yanenko, Vacheslav/A-4087-2014 Yin, Qing-Zhu/B-8198-2009 Gladkovsky, Sergei/E-5731-2016 Dudorov, Alexander/P-4773-2015 Weinstein, Ilya/K-8178-2012 Popova, Olga/K-1885-2012 Schmitt-Kopplin, Philippe/H-6271-2011 Mayer, Alexander/I-3069-2013 Shuvalov, Valery/C-6618-2014 Larionov, Mikhail/F-7770-2017 Solovyov, Andrey/G-8268-2014 Khaibrakhmanov, Sergey/G-7264-2015 Evers, Laslo/E-5707-2011 Ishchenko, Aleksey/E-1017-2014 Kartashova, Anna/N-3468-2013
ORCID-Numbers Rowland, Douglas/0000-0001-8059-6905 Yin, Qing-Zhu/0000-0002-4445-5096 Gladkovsky, Sergei/0000-0002-3542-6242 Weinstein, Ilya/0000-0002-5573-7128 Schmitt-Kopplin, Philippe/0000-0003-0824-2664 Mayer, Alexander/0000-0002-8765-6373 Larionov, Mikhail/0000-0003-1172-6950 Khaibrakhmanov, Sergey/0000-0002-4439-6831 Evers, Laslo/0000-0003-2825-6211 Ishchenko, Aleksey/0000-0002-9883-6652 Kartashova, Anna/0000-0003-4320-5105 Sanborn, Matthew/0000-0003-3218-1195 Granvik, Mikael/0000-0002-5624-1888 Li, Qiuli/0000-0002-7280-5508
Funding-Acknowledgement Institute for Dynamics of Geospheres; Federal Targeted Program Scientific and Educational Human Resources of Innovation-Driven Russia; RAS Presidium Program Fundamental Problems of Investigation and Exploration of the Solar System; NASA
Funding-Text The Russian Academy of Sciences (RAS) field study of the Chelyabinsk airburst was supported by the Institute for Dynamics of Geospheres and grants of the Federal Targeted Program Scientific and Educational Human Resources of Innovation-Driven Russia and the RAS Presidium Program Fundamental Problems of Investigation and Exploration of the Solar System. The office of Chelyabinsk Oblast Governor Mikhail Yurevich provided assistance. S. Petukhov and I. Talyukin from the Universe History Museum in Dedovsk contributed samples, as did M. Boslough of Sandia National Laboratories. U. Johann (Astrium Satellites GmbH) calculated the Chebarkul hole position from Pleiades 1A satellite observations. D. F. Blake provided use of a petrographic microscope. P.J. acknowledges support from the NASA Near Earth Object Observation Program, Q.Z.Y. and M.E.Z. from the NASA Cosmochemistry Program, and M. G. from the Academy of Finland.
Number-of-Cited-References 39
Usage-Count-Last-180-days 9
Usage-Count-Since-2013 108
Journal-ISO Science
Doc-Delivery-Number 259HS