2010年02月13日



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メキシコで宇宙からの正体不明の落下物が地面に30メートルのクレーターを残す



(※)住民たちの証言では、爆発音と閃光があり、約30メートルのクレーターが残っているようなので、空から来た何かが衝突したことは間違いなうよです。それが何かが現在のところわかっていないようです。今のところ、「隕石」という意見と、「ロシアのスパイ衛星」という意見などが出ているようですが、まだはっきりしていないようです。

AFP にメキシコでいん石目撃情報、実はロシア人工衛星の残がいという日本語の記事がありました。


Meteorite Hits Mexico Leaving 30 Meter Crater

Earth Changes Media 2010.02.12

A meteorite has smashed into the ground in Mexico, leaving a 30 meter (100 feet) wide crater, reports said. The meteorite impact was in the Ahuazotepec Municipality in Central Mexico between the cities of Puebla and Hidalgo. The Ahuazotepec, Mexico meteorite impact was so massive it broke windows in homes many kilometers from the epicenter and people reported buildings swaying and mass confusion. Other reports said the Mexico meteorite impact partially damaged a road and a bridge.

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The precise impact area of the meteorite was in a relatively unpopulated area and hit around 6.30pm local time, Mexican media said. The Mexican military was called-in to lock down the area where the apparent space rock slammed into the ground. Initial fears where that the impact was a aircraft crashing to the ground, but that report was later dismissed.

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The Central Mexico meteorite event was witnessed by countless people in the region of the impact, with people as far away as Mexico City saying they saw the burning object enter the atmosphere.



MEXICAN METEORITE: WAS IT RUSSIAN SPACE JUNK?

Discovery News 2010.02.11

UPDATE (4:00 am ET, Feb. 12): It would appear the initial reports of a "30 meter wide" crater may have been incorrect. No photographic evidence of the location of this mystery crater has emerged and AFP journalists are reporting that "nothing was found after a through search of the area yesterday." However, it remains probable that space debris originating from the Russian Cosmos 2421 spy satellite did re-enter over Mexico -- accounting for the eyewitness accounts -- but very little debris may have made landfall, if at all.

ORIGINAL POST: According to media sources in Mexico, a 30 meter wide crater was left after a meteorite impacted approximately 100 miles to the northwest of Mexico City in the municipality of Ahuazotepec, Puebla.

Eyewitnesses report seeing a light and then a "roar" as the alleged meteorite hit, swaying nearby buildings. According to one translated source, a bridge had been damaged by the impact that occurred at 6:30 pm local time on Wednesday evening. Windows were also shattered as a result of the blast.

Local authorities reported that emergency phone lines were jammed with scared people calling to find out what was happening.

The Mexican army arrived at the scene and cordoned off the area according to another news source. The possibility of a downed aircraft has been ruled out by the authorities.

However, new reports from the region suggest that the impactor wasn't a meteorite at all, but it did come from space.

José Jaime Herrera Cortes of the Mexican Space Agency has gone on record to say the object was a piece of space junk originating from a Russian satellite.

Cortes indicates that the U.S. Department of Defense has confirmed the object was a piece of the Cosmos 2421 satellite that was launched in 2006. As of 2008, 15 fragments of the spacecraft were being tracked.

The piece of space junk, cataloged with the ID number 33006 was expected to pass over Mexico at the approximate time of impact.

Personally, I find it strange how there are no photographs of the impact site and few details about the damage that has been done (although the impact site does appear to be in a sparsely populated region). Also, the reports are sketchy, so before we can start drawing any conclusions we'll have to wait for an official announcement.

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he Cosmos 2421 Spy Satellite

NASA's Orbiting Debris Quarterly News newsletter from 2008 goes into some detail as to the nature of Cosmos 2421. Perhaps unsurprisingly, it was a spy satellite and the U.S. Space Surveillance Network (SSN) had detected "significant fragmentation" of the three ton object earlier that year.

During the April-June period another two fragmentation events were detected, increasing the number of pieces of detectable junk over the size of 5cm to 500.

Cosmos 2421 was the 50th spacecraft of its class to be launched since 1974.

According to the report, "nearly half (22 out of 50) of the spacecraft have fragmented at least once, typically within a few months of the end of their primary missions." Bizarrely, the cause of these fragmentation events remain unknown.