Nonfiction ATTACK 4 storyworks
FROM O U TER SP ACE A huge fireball from space exploded above a Russian city, injuring more than a thousand people, and no one saw it coming. Can we protect ourselves next time? By Justin O Neill UP CLOSE Main Idea and Supporting Details This article has many details about objects in space and how they affect Earth. What main idea can you discover from these details? Look for Word Nerd s 10 terms IN BOLD It s February 15, 2013. The people of Chelyabinsk, Russia, start the day as usual. They eat breakfast. They go to work and school. But the 1.1 million people of this city are in for a strange day. This morning, a space rock is falling from the sky. The rock is 55 feet across. It s headed straight for Chelyabinsk. And no one knows it s coming. The rock has been circling close to Earth for thousands of years. This morning, it enters our atmosphere the layer of gases that surrounds Earth. The rock zooms toward Earth s surface. It grows so hot that it starts to crumble. It travels 40,000 miles an hour more than twice as fast as a space shuttle at launch. Now it s about 15 miles above the ground. It won t be long before it explodes! Go online for our behindthe-scenes video! GARY HANNA www.scholastic.com/storyworks SEPTEMBER 2013 5
Above and top right: Many people took pictures of the Chelyabinsk fireball with their cell phones and cameras. Their photos have greatly aided scientists. Bottom right: A large hole where a meteorite crashed into a frozen lake. People are puzzled as they see a fireball streak across the sky. It disappears in a flash of light brighter than the sun. A trail of smoke is left behind. Some people run outside or go to the windows for a better look. Others pull their cars over, alarmed. What was that? A missile? A plane crash? Aliens?! Two tense minutes pass. And then BOOM! SMASH! Shock waves shake the city. Loud bangs echo. Walls collapse. People are knocked to the ground. Windows break. Pieces of glass fly into homes, schools, and offices. In an instant, 1,200 people are hurt. They are lucky. It could have been worse. Rocks From the Sky Ever look up at the night sky and see a shooting star? Pretty, right? But don t be fooled. A shooting star is not a star. It s a meteor, the stream of light produced when a rock burns up in Earth s atmosphere. Our solar system has millions of rocks. They include asteroids (large space rocks), comets (part rock and part ice), and meteoroids (smaller space rocks). Very large and bright meteors, like the one in Chelyabinsk, are called fireballs. Pieces of space rocks that land on Earth are called meteorites. Long ago, people believed that falling rocks really came from Earth. They thought strong winds swept the rocks into the sky. Then, in 1794, German scientist Ernst Chladni suggested that such rocks came from outer space. No one took him seriously. Later, in 1803, thousands of meteorites fell on the French town of L Aigle. A scientist named Jean-Baptiste Biot studied them. Biot s findings convinced people that rocks can and do fall from space. Now we know that space rocks are Yekaterina Pustynnikova/AP Photo (background); VYACHESLAV NIKULIN/EPA/LANDOV (onlookers); SERGEI ILNITSKY/EPA/LANDOV (lake) 6 storyworks
leftovers from when the planets of our solar system formed about 4.5 billion years ago. Like the planets, the rocks move around the sun in circles called orbits. They mostly stay in the asteroid belt between Mars and Jupiter. But sometimes they bounce against each other and stray close to us. Each day, about 100 tons of debris flies toward Earth. Most of it burns up in the atmosphere and does no harm. But if a space rock larger than a mile across were to hit Earth, it would mean disaster. Sixty-five million years ago, an asteroid likely led to the extinction of the dinosaurs. That rock was six miles across. It crashed near what is now Mexico. Scientists believe dust clouds from the crash blocked out the sun, maybe for months, causing plants and animals to die. Could that happen again? Another Close Call The last time a space rock caused as much damage as the one in Chelyabinsk did was more than 100 years ago. By chance, it was EUROPE Tunguska event also in Russia. It was June 30, 1908. A farmer named S.B. Semenov was sitting on a porch in Siberia, an area in eastern Russia. Suddenly the sky lit up. A shock wave knocked him to the ground. He felt fierce heat. It almost burned the shirt off me, he wrote later. Semenov was more than 40 miles away from the center of what is now called the Tunguska event. Tunguska is a remote area of Siberia. The explosion had the force of nearly 200 atomic bombs. It felled 80 million trees in an area more than twice the size of New York City. Because Tunguska is so remote, it took decades for scientists to figure out what happened. There were many theories. Was it a UFO explosion? A science experiment gone wrong? A black hole passing through the planet? In fact, what happened in Tunguska was just like what happened in Chelyabinsk. The Tunguska meteor was simply larger and closer to the ground. These events are very rare. Few of today s scientists ever thought they would live to see one. Huge asteroid events, Area of detail AFRICA ASIA Kara Sea This photograph of a flattened forest shows the destruction caused by the Tunguska event. Fortunately, no one lived in Tunguska. If the explosion had occurred above Paris or London, the city would likely no longer exist. Topography/The Image Works. MAP: JIM McMAHON/MAPMAN EUROPE FINLAND ESTONIA LATVIA LITHUANIA BELARUS Mediterranean Sea Moscow UKRAINE Black Sea Chelyabinsk Caspian Sea Scale of Miles KAZAKHSTAN ASIA 0 400 800 www.scholastic.com/storyworks SEPTEMBER 2013 7
A researcher holds up a meteorite from Chelyabinsk. Spaceship Earth. But what if we saw a large asteroid coming toward us? Is there anything we could do? The experts at B612 say yes. We could turn the rock away from Earth by crashing an unpiloted spacecraft into it. If we couldn t do that, we might at least have time to move people out of an area before a crash. like the one that likely doomed the dinosaurs, are even more rare. They happen only once every 100 million years or so. Now a group of experts is working to make sure such an event never happens again. Spaceship Earth The B612 Foundation was started by former astronauts. It aims to protect Earth from asteroids. NASA, America s space research agency, has found most of the largest asteroids. But it has other important projects (like exploring Mars). It can t spend all its time and money on asteroids. So B612 is building a satellite called Sentinel. Sentinel will orbit the sun. It will hunt for asteroids. Right now, we re on Spaceship Earth, and we re flying through the universe without any windows, says Diane Murphy. Murphy works for B612. We re creating windows for WRITE TO WIN! Looking Both Ways What happened in Chelyabinsk is a reminder of something that s easy to forget: We live on a planet that is drifting through space. And drifting along with us are objects that could do us harm. But Murphy says there s no reason to panic. Asteroids are out there. We can t change that. But we can prepare for future impacts. We do lots of things to protect ourselves, says Murphy. Just like we look both ways for cars when we cross the street, we need to look both ways for asteroids. Luckily, no one in Chelyabinsk was killed. Most of the injuries were minor. Many people there have a new hobby: hunting for meteorites. Even small pieces of the fireball can be worth thousands of dollars. If you saw a meteorite, though, you probably wouldn t think it was anything special. Most look like plain black rocks. You d probably walk right by it. Imagine you are a scientist who works for the B612 Foundation. Write a speech explaining why the Sentinel satellite could be helpful to people on Earth. Cite examples from the article. Send your speech to Meteor Contest by October 15, 2013. Ten winners will each receive a copy of Every Soul a Star by Wendy Mass. See page 2 for details. Find an activity sheet online! STRINGER/Reuters/Landov 8 storyworks