This incident further enhances my belief that God always takes care of his most 
loved ones. God bless you ARR as always.

--- On Fri, 3/6/09, Vithur <[email protected]> wrote:

From: Vithur <[email protected]>
Subject: [arr] "I’d have become history in no time at all.” - ARR
To: [email protected]
Date: Friday, March 6, 2009, 4:10 AM











    
            



This (asteroid) too shall pass


6 Mar 2009, 0127 hrs IST, Mukul Sharma, ET Bureau









 Print 
 EMail 
 Discuss
 Share
 Save
 Comment
Text:












A R Rahman’s double Oscar win at the Academy Awards this year in recognition of 
his professional excellence was, arguably, the high point of the 




composer-musician’ s career. Probably even his life. Ironically, though, he 
might not have lived to see it. Two days earlier while rehearsing for the 
ceremony a massive chandelier covering a large part of the ceiling came 
crashing down just seconds after the maestro had moved away from the spot 
directly underneath it. According to Rahman, he felt it was a warning not to 
take any of the good things happening to him too seriously. “If I hadn’t moved 
away,” he said, “I’d have become history in no time at all.” 


So too would have St Petersburg on June 30, 1908 if it hadn’t been for the 
movement of Earth. Because on that day, about 8,000 kilometres away in the 
central Siberian region of Tunguska, a large meteorite or comet exploded on 
impacting the atmosphere. The blast, which was about 1,000 times more powerful 
than the Hiroshima bomb, felled an estimated 80 million trees over 2,150 square 
kilometres and caused an earthquake measuring 5.0 on the Richter scale. 
However, due to Earth’s rotation, St Petersburg was out of harm’s way. Meaning, 
if the impact had occurred just four hours 47 minutes later, it would have 
completely destroyed the Imperial Russian capital. A little later still, and 
chaos and destruction would have reigned in densely populated Europe. 


Scientists say the chances of a similar near-Earth object hitting the planet in 
the future is absolutely possible and fairly high. Last week, for instance, we 
dodged a bullet when asteroid 2009 DD45 passed within 70,000 kilometres of our 
planet — a hair’s breadth on a galactic scale. In the past also several such 
collisions have occurred. Long before the dinosaurs ever lived, the planet 
experienced a mass extinction event — called the Great Dying — that was so 
severe it killed 90% of all life on Earth. 


The 21st century is undoubtedly the high point of our civilisation’ s 
technology and many other fields of human endeavour. At the same time there are 
about a thousand kilometre-wide near-Earth objects up there that can 
unexpectedly fall out of the sky with catastrophic consequences. Perhaps 
there’s a warning here for all of us that we shouldn’t take our achievements 
too seriously either. Or as Rahman said in hindsight: “With the good came the 
rude reminder of how quickly it can all be snatched away.” 




http://economictime s.indiatimes. com/Cosmic- Uplink/This- asteroid- too-shall- 
pass/articleshow /4231176. cms


-- 
regards,
Vithur





 

      

    
    
        
         
        
        








        


        
        


      

Reply via email to