";s:4:"text";s:2625:" UPDATE: video … WAY double extre groovy cool! Isn’t it so Mr. Steve CohenCannot play top video — it says that it is private. You can cancel anytime.It’s hard to spot.
Lake Chebarkul (Russian: озеро Чебаркуль) is a lake in Chebarkulsky District, Chelyabinsk Oblast, Russia, on the slopes of the southern Urals. You can see impact at 0:40 (at about 0.25 and 0.25 from upper left corner). The video above is from a security camera taken by Nikolaj Mel’nikov, about 70 kilometers (45 miles) east of Chelyabinsk. The specimens are of various sizes, with the largest being 5 kg (11 lb), and initial laboratory analysis confirmed their meteoric origin. Scientists collected 53 samples nearby a 6-metre-wide hole in the ice of Lake Chebarkul, thought to be the result of a single meteorite fragment impact. At 41 seconds, you’ll see a puff of white that moves left to right; that’s the ice blown upward from the impact of the meteorite! In the slowed-down portion of the footage you’ll see a cloud of ice and snow blow up and quickly drift to the right of the shack seconds after impact.
Then they flash the framegrab for less than a second. It measured 5 feet long (1.5 meter) and broke into three pieces as scientists hoisted it into a scale to weigh it. While blurry and small, it’s amazing good fortune we have a document of this fall.Divers ultimately fished the 1/2 ton Chelyabinsk meteorite – the largest found so far – from the lake on Oct. 16. Then cloud of snow moves to the right.I really, really don’t understand the editing choices in (at least the YouTube version of) that video. Page 1 of 2 - Chebarkul - Chelyabinsk Meteorite Videos - posted in Space Rocks: I am combing through hundreds of YouTube videos to find the best examples of footage from the recent Russian Chebarkul meteorite fall.My selection criteria are :1) must be original, unedited footage with few/no cuts or mods.2) no compilations or best of videos.3) no soundtracks or silly distracting … Starting about 38 seconds in, look to the upper left, above the fence, at the line where the icy lake surface is seen against the darker, distant background (see the picture below for a reference). By joining Slate Plus you support our work and get exclusive content.
We certainly do. Edit: On re-watching yet again, the relevant section is zoomed slightly but not rotated.In this week's questions show, I explain how it's possible for stars to orbit so closely they're actually touching. Why speed through the raw footage?