Friday, February 15, 2013

Hundreds hurt by Meteorite!!! VIDEO



A meteor the size of a bus exploded in the atmosphere over theRussian Urals city of Chelyabinsk Friday, terrifying thousands with blinding light flashes and powerful sonic booms that shattered windows, damaged buildings, and injuries may be heading toward 1,000, mainly due to flying glass and debris.
Thanks to the proliferation of new technologies like CCTV and dashboard cameras in cars, the dazzling meteor shower that hit the far-western Siberian region may be the first event of its kind in history to be filmed from almost every angle.
Dozens of videos have cropped up on YouTube and other social media, and they offer an astounding glimpse of what happens when a huge hunk of rock, estimated at about 10 tons, plows into the atmosphere at a speed of 30,000 miles per hour. It disintegrated in a series of bright flashes while still several miles above the Earth's surface.
According to eyewitnesses quoted by the Ekho Moskvi radio station, the event began around 9 a.m. local time, when it was not yet full daylight. The station said that thousands of people rushed into the frigid streets, looking up at the fiery contrails in the sky, with many wondering if it was an air disaster, a missile attack, or the end of the world.
"My ears popped, the windows in our building are smashed, everyone says an airplane exploded. My cellphone stopped working for awhile," said one witness from Chelyabinsk.
"I was driving to work and suddenly there was this flash that lit everything up like bright sunlight," said another. "The shock wave nearly drove me off the road."
Close to 1,000 people were reported injured, but only three seriously enough to be hospitalized, according to the official RIA-Novosti agency. Windows were blown out across a wide area, and several buildings were reported damaged, including a Chelyabinsk factory, whose roof caved in.
Pieces of the meteor have been reported coming down across several regions in western Siberia and even nearby KazakhstanRussia's Defense Ministry reported that soldiers have located a 20-ft.-wide crater near a lake in Chelyabinsk region.
Russia's military may have known of the impending meteor strike several days in advance, but did not issue any special public warnings, according to the independent Rosbalt news agency (link in Russian).
"The preliminary data about its size and composition suggested it would break up in the atmosphere. There was no cause for alarm," the agency quoted an unnamed Defense Ministry official as saying.
Experts say that such meteor showers are not uncommon, but this one was much bigger than usual, and it occurred over a major population center in the early morning, where huge numbers of people could watch it. Chelyabinsk is an industrial city of about 1 million.
"Judging by the intensity of the shock waves, this was a body at least 30 ft. in diameter and weighing around 10 tons. That's a big one," says Nikolai Chugai, a department head at the official Institute of Astronomy in Moscow.
"It came in very fast, at a shallow angle, and disintegrated in an arc across the sky. That accounts for the amazing sound-and-light show.... If it had come in vertically, it would have been way more destructive, but over a smaller area," he adds.
The European Space Agency reported Friday that there is no connection between the meteor that hit Russia and the huge 165-ft. diameter asteroid known as DA14, which is due to pass within 17,000 miles of Earth – less distance than satellites in geosynchronous orbit – within the next day or so.
"It did a lot of damage, but what do you expect?" asks Nikolai Zheleznov, an expert with the Institute of Applied Astronomy in St. Petersburg. "A meteorite is a large projectile, like a bomb, that enters the atmosphere at high speed. Imagine the kinetic energy in a rock 30 ft. across. When it comes roaring into the atmosphere, the air density is like a solid wall that it slams into. Kinetic energy turns to heat, and then there is percussion....
"We live in a solar system that's full of asteroids and meteorites. There's no avoiding them. Thousands of tons of meteorites fall onto the Earth every year, far more than we can even keep track of. So, try not to worry too much."

Monday, February 11, 2013

Pre-Combine: Top 16 Draft Picks!


Texas A&M's Luke Joeckel may be the most complete player in his draft class. (Getty Images)
The 2013 NFL draft is far more convoluted than its immediate predecessor. With no obvious transcendent talent to fill the top in the form of an Andrew Luck or Robert Griffin III, you could easily argue five or six different players for the top spot without sounding too crazy. One thing we do know: the downgrade at quarterback is serious, as evidenced by the presence of just one signal-caller in our first Big Board. The line is where NFL teams will find value in this upcoming draft, and that's true on both sides of the ball.
Right now, the Big Board is based more on pure positional talent than team need, and where I think players will actually go. If this was a mock draft, you could see two or three quarterbacks in spots that are one or two rounds above where I think they actually are in the process, but that speaks to the complications of the position in this year's draft. There isn't an overall sure-fire winner this time around, and the 2012 class may be the ultimate outlier, but teams will always reach for arms. That's just the way it is.
So, here's our pre-combine 16 best; you can find 17-32 right here.
1. Luke Joeckel, OT, Texas A&M: The most technically sound lineman of any position in this draft class. Great edge protector, but plays with a right-tackle power. Will only get better with NFL reps.
2. Star Lotuleiei, DT, Utah: If you took game tape of Warren Sapp circa 1999 and sped it up about 20 percent, you'd have what Lotuleiei looks like at his best. A relentless force as an inside penetrator against the run and pass.
3. Chance Warmack, OG, Alabama: Classic straight-up mauler with impressive kick speed and lateral agility. The best in this class at sealing the inside edge. When he gets his hands on a defensive tackle or end, that guy is done. Can handle edge speed impressively well for his size and strength.
4. Eric Fisher, OT, Central Michigan: Plays the run well and can stand up to the bull rush, but pass protection is his specialty. Brings the young Joe Thomas and current Matt Kalil to mind with his kick-slide. Technical marvel with great leverage awareness.
5. Dee Milliner, CB, Alabama: An ideal pattern-read defender with outstanding spatial awareness and trail speed. Not afraid to get his nose busted. He blitzes and sheds blocks well; looks for a fight in a good way.
6. Damontre Moore, DE, Texas A&M: Moore could be the next Aldon Smith, but we're rating him this highly on potential to a degree. Very strong for his size (6-foot-4, 250) and can use impressive speed to get to the quarterback, but needs a bigger palette of hand and foot moves before he'll be a top-level pass-rusher in the NFL. However, the trend toward looping inside rushers (Clay Matthews, Smith, Bruce Irvin) favors Moore more than most.
7. Lane Johnson, OT, Oklahoma: Another Senior Bowl stud. Like Joeckel and Fisher, Johnson hits the NFL with impressive technique. Keeps his head on a swivel and has a really nice kick-slide. Could stand to put on a bit more weight and played primarily out of a two-point stance, but the team that puts in the finishing work could be rewarded with a multi-year Pro-Bowler.
8. Datone Jones, DT, UCLA: Starred at the Senior Bowl. Jones is a great leverage player who knows how to use his hands, and will often be seen knifing through blockers with impressive speed. Has the footwork and upper-body strength to move through and beat slide protection, and does it all from different positions. An underrated asset right now -- the scouting combine might change that. 'Tweener size (6-foot-4, 280) will have some teams wondering where he best fits.
UCLA's Datone Jones: An underrated asset in the right system. (Getty Images)
9. Bjoern Werner, DE, Florida State: Very aware defender, especially when diagnosing run plays in space, and has a real knack for batting passes at the line. Questions abound, however, when watching Werner transfer power to speed from the line. As J.J. Watt did coming out of Wisconsin, Werner will need coaches and coordinators who understand both his skills and liabilities. Total game-changer in the right scheme; could disappear otherwise.
10. Jarvis Jones, DE, Georgia: There are a few obvious Von Miller/Bruce Irvin comps in this draft, but Jones is probably the closest from a pure football speed perspective. Comes off the ball with ridiculous explosiveness and can sometimes get past blockers before they get a chance to set their feet. Will, however, need more overall moves to accentuate a smaller frame that may not stand much additional weight.
11. Barkevious Mingo, DE, LSU: A scud missile without a GPS at times. Mingo often played wide end, which can be a feast-or-famine position. Tremendous speed in space and off the snap, but can easily be blocked out at the line and may have to switch from end to outside linebacker at the next level. Another pass-rusher who would benefit from looping and stunting inside through free gaps.
12. Kenny Vaccaro, FS, Texas: More and more in the NFL, pass defenders must be able to take on many roles. The best safeties are required to play front-half and back-half coverage, and star in the slot in nickel and dime situations. While Vaccaro doesn't have center-field speed, he can play back in a pinch, and he's a very aware defender in the box and in the slot.
13. Geno Smith, QB, West Virginia: The best quarterback in this draft class, and the only one in the first round of the first big board. Inconsistent at times, but his combination of mobility and accuracy has to intrigue quarterback-starved pro teams. Concerns about his having played in a primary shotgun offense are oversold; more than one NFL team takes more than 70 percent of all snaps from the 'gun these days.
14. Keenan Allen, WR, Cal: Allen is an ideal receiver for any team looking to put its pass-catchers in multiple roles, as more NFL teams are doing these days -- watch how often guys like Calvin Johnson are in the slot now. Burns up turf on quick slants and screens; lateral agility in space makes him a nightmare for safeties and slot corners; comes to the NFL with a full array of skills.
15: Alex Okafor, DE, Texas: Had a dominant Senior Bowl week, which erased some concerns I had about his edge speed. Okafor played a lot with his hands off the ground at Texas, and I think he's better suited to be a traditional edge defender who can occasionally shift inside on nickel downs. Great upper-body strength and hand moves; must use leverage to mask lack of pure burst.
16. Cordarrelle Patterson, WR, Tennessee: Patterson is known for his straight-line speed, but don't ignore his ability to make gains in tight spaces on underneath routes -- and his ability to adjust to some fairly "interesting" passes from Tyler Bray. Still finding his feet at the FBS level, but could become a truly dynamic every-level NFL receiver in the right system.

Gareth Roberts
East Valley Consulting