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by fitzroy 1285 days ago
I'm confused. A 100 ft asteroid that explodes 2.2 miles in the air seems to result in far more deaths from a 0.6 mile wide fireball compared to a 200ft asteroid that would hit the ground in the same location (Fort Lauderdale, FL).

100ft = 211,172 deaths

Is this correct? https://imgur.com/a/Elst6Q3

3 comments

For the same reason nuclear weapons detonate over the ground. Greater destruction. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Air_burst
Digging a giant crater localizes the destruction and consumes most of the energy An air burst doesn't bother digging a giant crater and has a larger fraction of it's energy dumped into the atmosphere for fireballs, high winds, and direct radiation.
I thought asteroids didn't normally produce any direct radiation; their explosions are purely from being superheated by the atmospheric friction. (Obviously, nuclear airbursts do produce a lot of radiation.)
"Radiation" here refers to thermal radiation --- the direct radiant heat released through atmospheric friction and blast.

The shockwave itself is also radiant energy, in this case a kinetic overpressure wave.

Net impact effects are "wind blast, overpressure shock, thermal radiation, cratering, seismic shaking, ejecta deposition, and tsunami":

<https://agupubs.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1002/201...>

Remember that "radiation" simply refers to any effect that radiates outward from an initial point or source, say, a radiator. Yes, common parlance has abbreviated "ionizing nuclear radiation" as "radiation", but that's only one of numerous types of radiant energy.

When someone says "a nuclear bomb releases heat and radiation", the radiation they're referring to is not thermal radiation. You're being pedantic.
The link I provided gives alternate usage. You might wish to reconsider your position.
Well potential energy is turned into kinetic energy, which heats up the asteroid. Any water, or gas inside could well result in an explosion.

Things like turning night into day release a fair bit of radiation, like light.

The Tunguska event is thought to be an airburst, that flattened many trees (80M or so), made an incredibly loud explosion, and it's claimed it was nearly as bright as the sun.

That's not radiation though. When people talk about "radiation", they don't mean light, they mean ionizing radiation, not everything across the entire EM spectrum.
Air bursts give a wider area of destruction than ground bursts.
I knew this was true for nuclear weapons. It was just surprising that a smaller asteroid could be that much more dangerous than a larger one due to potentially exploding in the atmosphere.
Much the same mechanism sans radiation.