★★☆How Does One Find a Meteorite?

2014年08月14日 ★★☆, As It Is, VOA.

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Vocabulary

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  1. meteorite /ˈmiːtijəˌraɪt/ (n.)a piece of rock or metal that has fallen to the ground from outer space : a meteor that reaches the surface of the Earth without burning up entirely
  2. unable /ˌʌnˈeɪbəl/ (adj.) not able to do something
  3. seismic /ˈsaɪzmɪk/ (adj.) technical : of, relating to, or caused by an earthquake
  4. disappear /ˌdɪsəˈpiɚ/ (adj.)to stop being visible : to pass out of sight
  5. ultrasound /ˈʌltrəˌsaʊnd/ (n.) a method of producing images by using a machine that produces sound waves which are too high to be heard

Article

How Does One Find a Meteorite?

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 (1)Editor’s Note: The yearly Perseid meteor shower will reach peak intensity in the skies over Earth on the night of August 12 and 13. Although the moon will be unusually bright, there should still be a good show from this famous meteor shower.

(2) Much of the world will be able to see the Perseids after the sky becomes fully dark. The best viewing time is expected to take place early on the morning of August 13, between 3:00 to 4:00 a.m. your local time. Additional information can be found from the NASA website.

(3) Space rocks often enter the Earth’s atmosphere. But they usually explode and burn before falling to the ground. About 70 percent of our planet is covered with water. As a result, most meteorites falling from the sky disappear on the oceans’ floor. We would not know about them if it was not for an international agency.

(4) You may remember the meteorite that exploded last year 23 kilometers above Chelyabinsk, in Russia

(5) Scientists estimate it was about 18 meters long before it fell to Earth. They also think it had a mass of about 10,000 tons.

(6) Many people would have died if the meteorite fell in a populated area. Luckily, it did not. Instead it broke apart mid-air and most of the pieces fell into Lake Chebarkul.

(7) But that is a little too close for some people.

(8) The Comprehensive Nuclear-Test-Ban Treaty Organization Preparatory Commission is a group based in Vienna, Austria. It says the Earth is visited by meteorites more often than we know.

(9) This commission records explosions made by meteors that enter Earth’s atmosphere. Pierrick Mialle is an expert at the commission, also known as the CTBTO.

(10) This commission controls sensors and other equipment that watch for possible violations of the Nuclear Test ban treaty. Some of the devices are seismic, meaning they measure the movement of the Earth. Others are hydroacoustic, meaning they measure the sounds in the Earth’s oceans. The Commission also uses ultrasound and radionuclide sensors.

(11) Between 2000 and 2013, experts estimated that 26 powerful explosions of large meteors entered the atmosphere. At least four of those 26 explosions were stronger than the nuclear bomb that destroyed Hiroshima.

(12) In addition to loud noise, explosions create low frequency infrasound. Sound waves can travel very long distances at such low frequencies. But human beings are unable to hear them.

(13) CTBTO stations as far away as the Antarctica recorded the explosion of the Chelyabinsk meteorite.

(14) Mr. Mialle says listening stations operate anywhere from four to 15 high-technology sensors. He says that the sensors work like large microphones.

(15) He adds that some of the explosions are hard to identify immediately after they are recorded.

(16) “For instance, the first time we had this, what was later called the Super Bolide of North Pacific, in the first few weeks all that was known was a large event in the middle of the Pacific. But we didn’t know what it was.”

(17) The commission keeps contact with other agencies, such as NASA, that follow meteors and meteorites. NASA officials later confirmed that the mysterious explosion was caused by a meteorite.

(18) When complete, the CTBTO system will have 337 stations worldwide. And these stations will be listening for nuclear explosions and other loud sounds in the atmosphere.

Discussion

*Let’s talk about the article base on the questions below

  1. Have you experienced watching a meteor shower? Where did you see it?
  2. Are you interested in studying stars? Why?
  3. Why do you think it is important to study the rocks in the outer space?

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