天文界世纪谜题:通古斯大爆炸

2019-03-26 17:18:08 342
声音简介

The year is 1908, and it's just after seven in the morning. A man is sitting on the front porch of a trading post at Vanavara in Siberia. Little does he know, in a few moments, he will be hurled from his chair and the heat will be so intense he will feel as though his shirt is on fire.


That's how the Tunguska event felt 40 miles from ground zero.


Today, more than 100 years from that ferocious impact, scientists are still talking about it.


"If you want to start a conversation with anyone in the asteroid business all you have to say is Tunguska," says Don Yeomans, manager of the Near-Earth Object Office at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory. "It is the only entry of a large meteoroid we have in the modern era with first-hand accounts."


While the impact occurred in 1908, the first scientific expedition to the area would have to wait for 19 years. In 1921, Leonid Kulik, the chief curator for the meteorite collection of the St. Petersburg museum led an expedition to Tunguska. But the harsh conditions of the Siberian outback thwarted his team's attempt to reach the area of the blast. In 1927, a new expedition, again lead by Kulik, reached its goal.


"At first, the locals were reluctant to tell Kulik about the event," said Yeomans. "They believed the blast was a visitation by the god, who had cursed the area by smashing trees and killing animals."


While testimonials may have at first been difficult to obtain, there was plenty of evidence lying around. Eight hundred square miles of remote forest had been ripped asunder. Eighty million trees were on their sides, lying in a radial pattern.


"Those trees acted as markers, pointing directly away from the blast's epicenter," said Yeomans. "Later, when the team arrived at ground zero, they found the trees there standing upright – but their limbs and bark had been stripped away. They looked like a forest of telephone poles.”


Such debranching requires fast moving shock waves that break off a tree's branches before the branches can transfer the impact momentum to the tree's stem. Thirty seven years after the Tunguska blast, branchless trees would be found at the site of another massive explosion – Hiroshima, Japan.

Kulik's expeditions did finally get some of the locals to talk. One was the man based at the Vanara trading post who witnessed the heat blast as he was launched from his chair. His account goes:


Suddenly in the north sky… the sky was split in two, and high above the forest the whole northern part of the sky appeared covered with fire… At that moment there was a bang in the sky and a mighty crash… The crash was followed by a noise like stones falling from the sky, or of guns firing. The earth trembled.


The massive explosion packed a wallop. The resulting seismic shockwave registered with sensitive barometers as far away as England. Dense clouds formed over the region at high altitudes which reflected sunlight from beyond the horizon. Night skies glowed, and reports came in that people who lived as far away as Asia could read newspapers outdoors as late as midnight. Locally, hundreds of reindeer, the livelihood of local herders, were killed, but there was no direct evidence that any person perished in the blast.


"A century later some still debate the cause and come up with different scenarios that could have caused the explosion," said Yeomans. "But the generally agreed upon theory is that on the morning of June 30, 1908, a large space rock, about 120 feet across, entered the atmosphere of Siberia and then detonated in the sky."


It is estimated the asteroid entered Earth's atmosphere traveling at a speed of about 33,500 miles per hour. During its quick plunge, the 220-million-pound space rock heated the air surrounding it to 44,500 degrees Fahrenheit. At 7:17 a.m. (local Siberia time), at a height of about 28,000 feet, the combination of pressure and heat caused the asteroid to fragment and annihilate itself, producing a fireball and releasing energy equivalent to about 185 Hiroshima bombs.


"That is why there is no impact crater," said Yeomans. "The great majority of the asteroid is consumed in the explosion."


Yeomans and his colleagues at JPL's Near-Earth Object Office are tasked with plotting the orbits of present-day comets and asteroids that cross Earth's path, and could be potentially hazardous to our planet. Yeomans estimates that, on average, a Tunguska-sized asteroid will enter Earth's atmosphere once every 300 years.


"From a scientific point of view, I think about Tunguska all the time," he admits. Putting it all in perspective, however, "the thought of another Tunguska does not keep me up at night."

本文来源:

https://science.nasa.gov/science-news/science-at-nasa/2008/30jun_tunguska/

用户评论

表情0/300
猜你喜欢
谜题

我们就像对方出的一个题,最后答案都封在了心底。没有你的世界如此孤寂,我无法选择会不会再想起你。生命中有些人注定无法相知相守,他们就像过客般走近、走过、又走远。在...

by:华语音乐

动物世界谜题

有关动物的小故事解答孩子们常会提出的问题,满足孩子们对自然的探索

by:小声音Yui

宇宙谜题

本专辑主要讲述宇宙的各种千奇百怪的秘密

by:Rubin_ve

《回忆师Ⅰ谜题》

一个来历不明的回忆师,一个天真可爱的女孩,一只智力超群的角雕,由此组成了探案小分队,帮助警方侦破了一起又一起探讨人性迷局的悬案。同时,忆眼作为回忆师,因对自己的...

by:萬户侯

回忆师1:谜题(粤语)| 谜中谜 |10个谜题破解

失踪之谜、心境之谜、跟踪之谜、横尸之谜、谜上加谜、脑踪之谜、解救冰语、悬尸之谜、萧家之谜!为你揭开十个谜题!一个来历不明的回忆师,一个天真可爱的女孩,一只智力超...

by:15楼老牛_粤语土著

给山姆的信-如何探索世界谜题

给山姆的信-如何探索世界谜题作者:<英>艾伦.麦克法兰主播盛夏2022的联系方式:电子邮箱:shxia202209@163.com如果著作版权方不同意...

by:盛夏2022

评书:史记十大谜题

选取《史记》中十个最奇特、最具争议性、也没有历史定论的事件。“禅让”的真相到底是什么?秦始皇到底是谁的儿子?荆轲刺秦为何功亏一篑?窃符救赵,信陵君有无利益驱动?...

by:小胖其实不是特别胖