Geekend: Of Meteors & Men

David Wagner, Managing Editor | 2/15/2013 | 46 comments

David Wagner
How could the Geekend ignore the fact that a meteor exploded over Russia today? It is enough to make you want to call Bruce Willis and Ben Affleck, especially when we know a meteor much larger is going to pass closer to the earth than some of our satellites orbit.

One can only look at the shocking video at the beginning of this ABC News report and wonder how anyone held the camera steady enough to record it:

People must have thought the world was ending. Over a thousand people were hurt in the explosions, but, thankfully, most of those were minor injuries due to broken glass. My thoughts go out to those more seriously injured.

Interestingly enough, there are no known human fatalities from meteor strikes, but it seems to have been a constant source of fear among humans since our earliest ancestors walked upright. There are cave paintings depicting meteor strikes, as well as art from early civilizations also showing comets and meteors.

I think the fear of instant, random death from above makes meteors scary enough, but since we’ve become fairly certain that the only reason mammals rule the Earth instead of Dinosaurs is because of a meteor strike, it has entered the psyche of most humans. And this time, we won’t have the dinosaurs to protect us:

The problem for humans is that whether it is space travel or giant rocks hurtling to the Earth, space still means instant death if you make a mistake. The aura of danger around space is evident in every Geekend discussion we have of space travel or research. We’re tiny earthbound creatures, and the idea of moving into that awesome, limitless, blackness is too much. And the fact that the blackness occasionally hurls something out of the dark at us just makes it worse.

So, in the wake of the biggest near-miss we’ve gotten on camera, I felt a desire to also restore the beauty of space. So here are some pictures taken by the Hubble Space Telescope:

Whirlpool Galaxy
Whirlpool Galaxy

Galaxy M82
Galaxy M82

I also wanted to share with you the first song to debut from space, from just four days ago. Geekend favorite Barenaked Ladies recorded a live duet with Canadian astronaut Chris Hadfield (who made up his mind to become an astronaut at the age of nine when he saw Neil Armstrong land on the moon). The song is about the connection between ISS astronauts and home. I’m especially a fan of the lines, “That ball of shining blue houses everybody anybody ever knew. So sing your song, I’m listening, out where stars are glistening. I can hear your voices bouncing off the moon.”

Amazingly, this wasn’t the first duet from the International Space Station. U2 (another Geekend favorite) did live concert duets with ISS commander Mark Kelly in 2011, shortly after his wife, Rep. Gabby Giffords, had been shot. Commander Kelly is obviously a little less musical, but the sentiment was equally beautiful.

If you have trouble seeing Kelly’s part well in the first video, here is official video of just that part.

I’d have just used that one, but they cut off the second part of the duet, which I like very much.

Anyway, in the wake of a giant rock slamming into Russia, it seemed a good time to remember that we’re one planet and one people. And it seemed important to show people who, in the face of the sheer terror that space (and in the case of Cmdr. Kelly, also the violence of a man towards his wife) can sometimes provide, can also find a way to do the most human of things -- produce art for their fellow men. I hope you find a little beauty in space today to help balance the fear.

What do you think? Are you worried an asteroid will slam into your house? Do you take more inspiration or fear from space? What would you do if you knew there was an asteroid heading to destroy earth and you only had a week to live? Comment below.

View Comments: Newest First | Oldest First | Threaded View
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singlemud   Geekend: Of Meteors & Men   2/18/2013 5:09:16 PM
Earth defense system
It was amazing to see such high def video recording this moment. In addition to the missile defense system, we may need to think about earth defense system.
CMTucker   Geekend: Of Meteors & Men   2/18/2013 2:34:13 PM
Re: I don't expect meteors
@SaneIT yet we don't want taxpayer money paying for some dumb ol' telescope in the desert that just stares at the sky. We can do that laying on the hoods of our cars at the gravel pits.
SaneIT   Geekend: Of Meteors & Men   2/18/2013 8:49:25 AM
Re: I don't expect meteors
For me one of the most eye opening things was that while we can track some objects in space for months or years knowing exactly how close they will come to us that objects coming from the right direction are practically invisible to us until they hit.  I'm surprised that we don't have any way to watch the skies in every direction to see objects moving around us.
Technocrat   Geekend: Of Meteors & Men   2/18/2013 5:10:12 AM
Re: I don't expect meteors
The meteor that slammed into Russia was indeed eye opening, so often this is the stuff of science fiction, but there it was for the World to see. Thank Goodness no one was hurt.

And what would I do if we had only a week to live ?  All sorts of things not fit for print.  ; )
kicheko   Geekend: Of Meteors & Men   2/17/2013 9:09:24 PM
Re: I don't expect meteors
It is simply one of those things you don't wake up thinking about on a day to day basis. We hear of earthquakes and we experience tremors, but things from the sky above hasn't always been usual. i've even heard some people argue that the government was spending excess dollars on the NASA guys. Maybe they were wrong.
tinym   Geekend: Of Meteors & Men   2/17/2013 5:39:38 PM
Re: I don't expect meteors
Such a cheery outlook, Broadway. Our best hope is a lucky break found with our sophisticated technologies that may or may not give warning of an ELE.
Broadway   Geekend: Of Meteors & Men   2/17/2013 3:04:32 PM
Re: I don't expect meteors
@Umair, that is not necessarily true. There have been great efforts made to set up tsunami-alert systems in the Pacific and Indian Oceans, and scientists are working to be able to better forecast earthquakes -- even if just minutes or hours before they happen -- in both cases to give people extra time to vacate the danger zones. Just as there are efforts to map the skies so we know if/when a celestial object is going to be flying close to our Earth's orbit. My point: mankind is doing its best to mitigate the risk of natural disaster. But the scale of natural disasters can be so enormous -- mass extinction type events -- that there really isn't much we can do besides try to anticipate it better.
Henrisha   Geekend: Of Meteors & Men   2/17/2013 10:32:12 AM
Re: I don't expect meteors
True, Umair, but maybe it is time we all thought about it and how to address it. Nature (and its catastrophies) await no one. It would certainly be more prudent if people did something about it, before it was too late.
Henrisha   Geekend: Of Meteors & Men   2/17/2013 10:31:29 AM
Re: galaxy, the last frontier
Right on, Pedro. So much stuff is happening and being studied, but it's ironic how essential, earth and survival-threatening stuff isn't being looked into enough.
Salik   Geekend: Of Meteors & Men   2/16/2013 3:49:30 AM
Re: I don't expect meteors
I aint scared of any meteors and am in constant remembrance of death if that what striking of a meteor in a week would mean. It is quite natural and unexpected how people die one morning being in the best of all healths. Moreover, if a meteor would be striking the earth in a weeks time, I'd just seek forgiveness for whatever wrong I have done in the entire life. Certainly, none of us would be certain of its outcomes, nor anyone would ever, would live quite normally I think. :)
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