13 BANG!
il it tmosp onesecond before it talking about sometens of timesfaster test bullet. Unless it elescope, and t’sby no means a certainty, it ake us completely by surprise.”
or s depends on a lot of variables—angle of entry, velocity andtrajectory, ing object, among mucer t. But ists can do—and Anderson and itzke site and calculate t of energy released. From t tplausible scenarios of must happened now.
An asteroid or comet traveling at cosmic velocities er tmospsuc t couldn’t get out of tly, and temperature belo o some 60,000 Kelvin, or ten times temperature of tant of its arrival in our atmospeor’s patories, cars—would crinkle and vanish like cellophane in aflame.
One second after entering tmospeorite o t before been going about their business.
teorite itself antly, but t a ters of rock, earted gases. Every living t been killed by t of entry . Radiating outalmost t ial s.
For tside te devastation, t inkling of catastrop—test ever seen by ant to aminute or ter by an apocalyptic sigo tire field of vieraveling atts approac since it all building in Omao look in t direction urmoil folloantaneous oblivion.
ites, over an area stretco Detroit and encompassing y, ties—t, ins—nearly every standing ttened or on fire, and nearly every living to a t and slicedor clobbered by a blizzard of flying projectiles. Beyond a tation fromt would gradually diminish.
But t’s just tial s teddamage it certainly set off a cating earto rumble and spes