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Describing impact as a mass the size of one to seven ships as large as the Titanic when fully loaded hitting the earth at 27,000 miles per hour is some horrible sci-fi writing and must be removed. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 194.100.39.193 (talk) 09:20, 5 March 2012 (UTC)[reply]
I removed that description. However, brace yourself for all sorts of trouble from doomsayers and conspiracy believers. We have another "Elenin" on our hands. — Preceding unsigned comment added by Wildespace (talk • contribs) 10:39, 5 March 2012 (UTC)[reply]
I find these asteroid articles confusing. I think there should be, first, just the flyby distance above the earth's surface in km. The same data again in miles, and tiny fractions of an AU, and distances from earth center, are not useful and add clutter. The medieval custom among news reporters to write about astronomyinmiles should not be encouraged or facilitated.
Second, there should be a standard history format. Put events in clean prose, in chronological order (I always like "big endian" dates), like this:
2012 Feb 23 - Duende was discovered by the Observatorio Astronómico de La Sagra in Spain, operated remotely by astronomers in Mallorca.
2013 Jan 9 - Duende was observed again by Las Campanas Observatory, increasing the observation arc from 79 days to 321 days.
2013 Feb 15 - The unrelated Chelyabinsk meteor arrived 16 hours before Duende.
2013 Feb 15, 19:25 UT - Duende passed 27,743 kilometers above Earth's surface, closer than geosynchronous orbit. It briefly peaked at an apparent magnitude of roughly 7.2, not visible to the naked eye.
2013 Feb 16 to 20 - Goldstone Observatory observed Duende with radar. It is an elongated asteroid with dimensions of 20 by 40 meters, geometric mean 28 meters.
2046 Feb 15 - Duende will pass about 2.2M km from the earth.
2123 Feb 16 - Duende will pass a minimum of 23K km, 750K km nominal, above the earth's surface.
This could then be followed by other details, such as "The 2013 close approach to Earth reduced the orbital period of Duende from 368 days to 317 days, and perturbed it from the Apollo class to the Aten class of near-Earth asteroids." etc. Friendly Person (talk) 18:48, 28 January 2015 (UTC)[reply]
Under "Risks," to say "The asteroid will not impact the Earth on February 15, 2013" is a statement of fact before the fact. Unless one is a time traveler, it cannot be known if the asteroid will impact the earth or not. Even if the chances of impact are millions-to-1, there is still a millions-to-1 chance. There's a millions-to-1 chance of winning a lottery, but it happens. A statement such as "Scientists believe there is no chance the asteroid will impact the earth" is much more factual and doesn't tread on the slippery and nonobjective ground of speculation/fortune telling. 67.168.212.213 (talk) 09:25, 8 December 2012 (UTC) Spud[reply]
I would like to understand the probability of 2012 da14 coming close enough to a communications satelite to influence it's orbit and how much of a pertabation the satelite can correct for with it's on board fuel. Comments to storys on the net seem to run toword the extreem, but nobody seems to have any real info. The article that ran in the 2 jan 2013 WSJ page a14 was interesting but lacked detail. -- SFCharlie (talk) 00:21, 4 January 2013 (UTC)[reply]
Um, it's not so much the flyby speed - that's never been outside of 7 to 27 km/sec - but the flyby distance. If the asteroid passes 10 meters from the satellite I think it would perturb its orbit a little; Force exerted, F, = G m1 m2 / r^2 and delta V = vector integral( m/F ). Geo's generally carry fuel enough to change orbital position, such as moving a weather satellite over a different part of a continent; and finally, to move them into a safe graveyard orbit. This might fit in the article if it could be compressed down to about 2 words. Friendly Person (talk) 19:08, 28 January 2015 (UTC)[reply]
A NASA sourced image of 2012 DA14 passing Earth has been added and removed several times. This infobox generally includes images where available. The orbital diagram is also very important but is specific to the pass in Feb 2013. This object will be back in December and another section will be created for that most likely but the image of the asteroid itself is applicable there as well. This is why the artist's conception of the asteroid (based on optical and radar observations) is most appropriate for the inbox.
I also disagree that this image is "fear porn". It was put out by NASA in press releases explaining that while this will be the closest pass of an object this large, it poses no danger. The image is accurate and depicts the apparent dimension of the Earth as seen from 2012 DA14. --RadioFan (talk) 02:40, 10 February 2013 (UTC)[reply]
Your art conveys zero information to the reader and gives the reader the impression that the asteroid is huge since there is zero sense of depth. Infobox's use REAL images when they are available. That is not a real image, nor is it based on radar imaging.
What makes you think the asteroid will be back in December?
When you reverted my edit, you reverted my corrections to your mistake claiming that the asteroid is currently Aten class.
It's not my art, it's NASA's It conveys the shape of the object based on observational data
the orbital period has been calculated to 317 days. as of Feb 1
That was a bit premature but it has been reclassified as Aten class as of the Feb 15, 2013 pass due to orbital changes. You must have missed the updated reference there.--RadioFan (talk) 03:04, 10 February 2013 (UTC)[reply]
As of 2012 Feb 9th, DA14 has NEVER been resolved optically or by radar. It has only been seen as a star-like point in the sky.
DA14 will not be perturbed until Feb 15th, so as of 2012 Feb 9th, the orbital period is still 366 days. We should change ALL of that orbital parameters only AFTER the perturbation. -- Kheider (talk) 03:13, 10 February 2013 (UTC)[reply]
The period of 317 days (after the close approach) is the period of the orbit around the Sun. So it gains 360/317 - 360/365 = 0.149 degrees per day, so it will take roughly 360/0.149 = 2400+ days for it to catch up to the Earth (assuming it is not perturbed in the meantime). Bubba73You talkin' to me?03:16, 10 February 2013 (UTC)[reply]
In roughly ~6 months NASA will use yet a different epoch. The 2012-Sep-30 epoch is more accurate as the "current solution" until Feb 15th. -- Kheider (talk) 04:03, 10 February 2013 (UTC)[reply]
I think I see. You can partition its motion in 3 stages - (1) original elliptical motion around the sun (2) Hyperbolic motion past the earth (above escape velocity) (3) New elliptical motion around the sun. So the elliptical orbital data from last fall is relatively accurate up to some small number of days when its nearest the earth, and neither before or after elliptic orbit fit can be particularly accurate during that hyperbolic stage. Tom Ruen (talk) 18:19, 10 February 2013 (UTC)[reply]
Under the risk section: "The risk is less than one two hundred thousandth of the estimated risk of another similarly sized asteroid impacting Earth during that time period". It would be nice to identify this "similarly sized ateroid", perhaps with a link. Olynickjeff (talk) 19:24, 13 February 2013 (UTC)[reply]
I'd be hesitant to add any information on similar objects since specifics were not included in the original reference. We could add a "similar" objects, but it wouldn't be WP:OR .--RadioFan (talk) 19:39, 13 February 2013 (UTC)[reply]
My apologies about promoting the name of the "other object" which was incorrect and not the actual name. I hope perhaps some time the object that landed in Russia will have a proper meteor name, though I guess it may not be that important.--Radical Mallard (talk) 18:28, 18 February 2013 (UTC)[reply]
I read somewhere that a Russian scientist explained that the reason an object breaks up entering the earth's atmosphere is that the difference in pressure between the front side and the back side become so great that the object loses its ability to stay in one piece. I've not seen this written anywhere else. Usually the explanation is that it's the heat from friction that causes it to explode. Which is it, and could the correct explanation be included, as it applies to a meteoroid (or meteorite)? JohnClarknew (talk) 05:08, 16 February 2013 (UTC)[reply]
In section "risk" the article says "There is a cumulative 0.00000021% risk (1 in 4,700,000) of 2012 DA14 impacting Earth during future passes between 2080 and 2111.[4]"
However 0.00000021% would be 1 in 470,000,000 not 1 in 4,700,000. 1 in 4,700,000 would be 0.000021%
The lead sentence gives figures for the size and mass, with a reference to #4. But #4 is about Goldstone's scheduled observations and I don't see the size and mass there. I think the reference needs to be changed. Bubba73You talkin' to me?19:32, 16 February 2013 (UTC)[reply]
Goldstone lists the estimated size of 50 meters. Since DA14 has been removed from the Sentry Risk Table you can no longer see the estimated mass of 190,000 metric tons (based on an absolute magnitude of 24.1) until the WayBack Machine archive becomes more recent. The olderWayBack Machine archive from 25 Aug 2012 will show an estimate of 45 meters with a mas of 1.3e+08 kg (based on an absolute magnitude 24.4). But I do not think getting the numbers out-of-sync does the reader much good. I suggest waiting to see if Goldstone comes up with a more reliable size estimate. -- Kheider (talk) 19:52, 16 February 2013 (UTC)[reply]
There's a number of astrophotos of the crossing, like at [1], none I've seen that are really striking, but it would be nice for something on Wikipedia. APOD had a good movie [2]. Maybe someone will upload their pictures? If I had more time, I'd shoot out some emails and see if anyone wants to share. Tom Ruen (talk) 21:07, 18 February 2013 (UTC)[reply]
I was waiting for Goldstone images as well, but at 28 meters in diameter, even Goldstone imaging will be unimpressive to the public. -- Kheider (talk) 18:08, 19 February 2013 (UTC)[reply]
The movie frames added are interesting, better as actual movie [3], and in both cases at least it shows the asteroid is significantly elongated. Tom Ruen (talk) 20:52, 19 February 2013 (UTC)[reply]
The flyby had a huge impact on the orbit of 2012 DA14, shortening its orbital period by 48 days. How does the transfer of energy effect the orbit of Earth? Did it effect Earth's rotation? Is the day now 1 ms longer or shorter than before? -- Petri Krohn (talk) 18:28, 19 February 2013 (UTC)[reply]
Earth was probably perturbed by about the width of an atom. The escape velocity from 2012 DA14 (based on a rocky asteroid with a radius of 14 meters) is only 0.014 meters (0.55 in) per second. As a rule of thumb for rocky asteroids, the radius (in km) roughly equals escape velocity (in meters per second). -- Kheider (talk) 18:37, 19 February 2013 (UTC)[reply]
News media and scientific debate caused a strong correlation between "2012 DA14" and "Russian meteor event" concepts. The best proof is the traffic peak at the day of the event (2013-02-15):
Due to DA14 making it's closest approach there was wildly unscientific speculation on Feb 15th. The news media loves sensationalism (more than science) because it draws in more readers. -- Kheider (talk) 12:20, 23 February 2013 (UTC)[reply]
Yes (!), and I understand that, for explain URL statistics, part of increased page views was by the "Google Doodle effect"[4] that pointed to here, another part is the "natural public interest of correlated concepts or deepening the subject", as show by statistics of other Wikipedia correlated (to the Russian event) articles: compare with Meteoroid, Shock wave statistics. --Krauss (talk) 13:21, 23 February 2013 (UTC)[reply]
to put in a subsection the introductory losted parentesis "(The 2013 Russian meteor event occurred about 16 hours earlier than the asteroid's passing, but is considered unrelated, with a significantly different orbit.)[9][10]".
to explain amount of OLD-documents and links in the Internet, that was not corrected, but are from "reliable fonts";
to explain events like "Google Doodle correlating the things";
to enforce that "there was wildly unscientific speculation on Feb 15th", but not only sensationalism;
to enforce that it is "considered unrelated, with a significantly different orbit".
Yes, you're right, I edited the draft: not have anything else that might be confused with that kind of statement. Please, check if it is ok. --Krauss (talk) 21:35, 23 February 2013 (UTC)[reply]
Dear Kheider, this is in part your opinion, not the mine (and perhaps neither others)... I think that other people with other words could convince you. The best to decide is to publish it, and wait for others to edit, in the spirit of the NPOV policy. Another option would be edit here (below), without radical cuts, to gradually obtain the ideal text, less biased. Please check also the "rationale" above, explaining your objective objections, if necessary. --Krauss (talk) 00:48, 26 February 2013 (UTC)[reply]
Interest peak, from 20,000 page views to 350,000 page views. 2012 DA14article's Wikipedia traffic statistics[1], as measured evidence of the big sudden interest.
The 2013 Russian meteor event occurred about 16 hours earlier than the asteroid's passing. By technical point of view, is considered unrelated, with a significantly different orbit; [2][3] but the technical facts were not known at the day of the event, and the suspected correlation generated a big media interest around DA14. As illustred, the interest growed ~33 times in one day.
So, historically, by the coincidental passage days, DA14 and Russian event stay (with a lot of registred historic news) as subjects strongly related in the media coverage.
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