I believe he's referring to the appearance of a glowing object approaching
from _behind_ the main mass that correlates in time and direction to the
ejection of fragments with its disappearance into the main mass.  Yes,
we're talking delta-velocities that are outside of plausible explanation by
ballistic missiles or any other known propulsion technology.  Ignoring the
out-going fragments, the most plausible explanation I can come up with for
this approach-from-behind object is modification of the source footage.  An
optical artifact doesn't cut it due to the time correlation with the
expulsion of fragments unless someone can come up with a optical artifact
that would also explain those fragments.

There are a few statistical anomalies surrounding the celestial events --
which may be explained independently but taken as independent events seems
to multiply their probabilities towards zero:

1) Regardless of whether detection of asteroids has just recently become
advanced enough to detect those on the order of 50m passing inside of
geostationary orbit, we have the phenomenon of the first public
announcement of such an event (Asteroid 2012 DA14) making its closest
approach on Feb 15, 2012.

2) The shockwave from the Feb 15 Russian meteor was sufficient to cause
widespread physical damage in populated areas and such intense shockwaves
correlated with meteoric fireballs have not been reported for decades.

3) The vectors of these two objects -- asteroid and large meteor --
appear statistically independent.

It is difficult to assign an independent probability to #1 since we're
potentially talking about a once-in-history phenomenon relating not to the
mere close-passage of a sizable asteroid -- but rather to the phenomenon of
public announcement.

It is easier to assign an independent probability to #2 since it is hard
for such a large shockwave to go unreported if the meteor enters over land,
and by taking into account the fraction of Earth's surface that is land we
can increase the  expected frequency only a few fold at best.

On Sun, Feb 17, 2013 at 10:15 AM, Edmund Storms <[email protected]>wrote:

> What is so unusual about this video? The meteor exploded, which sent
> fragments in all directions, including straight ahead as the video shows.
> As for shooting down an object slowing from 17000 mph in the atmosphere,
> where is the common sense?
>
> Ed
>
> On Feb 17, 2013, at 7:17 AM, Jones Beene wrote:
>
> http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-octPHs9gcs&feature=player_embedded#t=0s***
> *
> ** **
> ** **
> NASA failed to mention the surprising activity that seems to show up in
> this Russian video, in slo-mo.****
> ** **
> The video could have been altered - with the addition  of a fast moving
> object that seems to impact with the object to make it explode (at about
> 27 seconds).****
> ** **
> Since the original story of a missile shoot-down came from Russian
> military, why not give it some credence?****
> ** **
> Unless of course it can be shown that this video was altered.****
> ** **
> ** **
> ** **
> ** **
> NASA's blog 
> states<http://blogs.nasa.gov/cm/blog/Watch%20the%20Skies/posts/post_1360947411975.html#comments>
> :****
>
> "Asteroid DA14's trajectory is in the opposite direction"****
>
> ** **
> 180 degrees is pretty far from 90 degrees.****
> ** **
> What is your cite, Terry?****
>
>
>

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