Sometimes looking back in History can be pretty scary.
If this analysis is correct this was a very near miss?
There have been many extinction events in Earth's history, most are safely buried millions of years in the past, but this one was pretty close to our time!
Keep your sightglass full, your firebox trimmed and your EYES ON THE SKIES!
KJ
Billion Tonne Comet May Have Missed Earth By A Few Hundred Kilometers in 1883
A re-analysis of historical observations suggest Earth narrowly avoided an extinction event just over a hundred years ago
10/17/2011
From: Technology Review at MIT
On
12th and 13th August 1883, an astronomer at a small observatory in
Zacatecas in Mexico made an extraordinary observation. José Bonilla
counted some 450 objects, each surrounded by a kind of mist, passing
across the face of the Sun.
Bonilla published his account of this
event in a French journal called L'Astronomie in 1886. Unable to
account for the phenomenon, the editor of the journal suggested, rather
incredulously, that it must have been caused by birds, insects or dust
passing front of the Bonilla's telescope. (Since then, others have
adopted Bonilla's observations as the first evidence of UFOs.)
Today,
Hector Manterola at the National Autonomous University of Mexico in
Mexico City, and a couple of pals, give a different interpretation. They
think that Bonilla must have been seeing fragments of a comet that had
recently broken up. This explains the 'misty' appearance of the pieces
and why they were so close together.
But there's much more that
Manterola and co have deduced. They point out that nobody else on the
planet seems to have seen this comet passing in front of the Sun, even
though the nearest observatories in those days were just a few hundred
kilometres away.
That can be explained using parallax. If the
fragments were close to Earth, parallax would have ensured that they
would not have been in line with the Sun even for observers nearby. And
since Mexico is at the same latitude as the Sahara, northern India and
south-east Asia, it's not hard to imagine that nobody else was looking.
Manterola
and pals have used this to place limits on how close the fragments must
have been: between 600 km and 8000 km of Earth. That's just a hair's
breadth.
What's more, Manterola and co estimate that these
objects must have ranged in size from 50 to 800 metres across and that
the parent comet must originally have tipped the scales at a billion
tonnes or more, that's huge, approaching the size of Halley's comet.
That's
an eye opening re-examination of the data. Astronomers have seen a
number of other comets fragment. The image above shows the
Schwassmann-Wachmann 3 comet which broke apart as it re-entered the
inner Solar System in 2006. There's no reason why such fragments
couldn't pass close by Earth.
One puzzle is why nobody else saw
this comet. It must have been particularly dull to have escaped
observation before and after its close approach. However, Manterola and
co suggest that it may have been a comet called Pons-Brooks seen that
same year by American astronomers.
Manterola and co end their
paper by spelling out just how close Earth may have come to catastrophe
that day. They point out that Bonilla observed these objects for about
three and a half hours over two days. This implies an average of 131
objects per hour and a total of 3275 objects in the time between
observations.
Each fragment was at least as big as the one
thought to have hit Tunguska. Manterola and co end with this: "So if
they had collided with Earth we would have had 3275 Tunguska events in
two days, probably an extinction event."
A sobering thought.
Ref: arxiv.org/abs/1110.2798: Interpretation Of The Observations Made In 1883 In Zacatecas (Mexico): A Fragmented Comet That Nearly Hits The Earth
Close Call in 1883!
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