# Chelyabinsk's Hidden Danger: When the Sun Hid an Asteroid

# Chelyabinsk's Hidden Danger: When the Sun Hid an Asteroid

# This is your Astronomy Tonight podcast. Good evening, stargazers! Today we're celebrating one of the most thrilling moments in modern astronomy—a moment that had scientists literally jumping out of their seats and probably spilling coffee all over their keyboards. On February 15th, 2013, we witnessed the Chelyabinsk meteor event—the largest impact since the Tunguska explosion over a century earlier. Now, here's where it gets absolutely wild: this wasn't some distant cosmic event we observed through telescopes. Oh no. This happened in broad daylight over Russia, and it was *spectacular*. At 9:20 AM local time, a space rock roughly 20 meters across—about the size of a six-story building—came screaming through Earth's atmosphere at a blistering 19.16 kilometers per second. We're talking 42,000 miles per hour, folks. The friction from our atmosphere heated it to thousands of degrees, creating a brilliant fireball that was actually *brighter than the Sun itself*. The explosion occurred about 23 kilometers above the city of Chelyabinsk, releasing energy equivalent to 400 to 500 kilotons of TNT—roughly 30 times the power of the Hiroshima bomb. The blast wave was so powerful it shattered windows across multiple cities and injured over 1,200 people, yet incredibly, no fatalities were directly recorded. The cosmic kicker? Astronomers *hadn't even detected it beforehand*. It approached from the direction of the Sun, making it virtually invisible in our pre-impact surveillance systems. Thank you for listening to another episode of Astronomy Tonight! If you enjoyed tonight's cosmic tale, please subscribe to the Astronomy Tonight podcast. For more detailed information about this and other astronomical events, visit Quiet Please dot AI. Thanks for tuning in to another Quiet Please Production! This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.

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Episoder(577)

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