The Chelyabinsk meteor is estimated to have had a mass of 10,000 - 13,000 metric tons. A black hole of mass $13\times10^6\ \mathrm{kg}$ has a radius of
$$ r = \frac{2GM}{c^2} = \frac{(2 \times 6.674\times10^{-11}\ \mathrm{m^3\ kg^{-1}\ s^{-2}}) \times (13\times10^6\ \mathrm{kg})}{9\times10^{16}\ \mathrm{m^2\ s^{-2}}} \approx 1.93 \times 10^{-20}\ \mathrm m \approx \frac{1}{22000} r_\text{proton}$$
According to this Hawking Radiation Calculator a black hole of this mass has a lifetime of about 185000 seconds, a little over 2 days.
Assume for a moment that somehow such a black hole could exist and collide with the earth, am I correct in assuming that, since its interaction cross-section is so small, it would sail through the earth without much happening?
Looking it at from another point of view, calculating the gravitational attraction to the black hole at short distances, I find that at $1\ \mathrm m$ the force is negligible ($.0009\ \mathrm N$). However the inverse-square law applies, so at $1\ \mathrm{mm}$ the force is $867\ \mathrm N$, meaning maybe the "cross-section" isn't so small after all.
The Hawking Radiation Calculator also gives a luminosity of $\rlap{\raise{0.5ex}{\rule{17ex}{1px}}}\approx 3.56 \times 10^8\ \mathrm W$. At a distance of $\rlap{\raise{0.5ex}{\rule{5ex}{1px}}}1\ \mathrm{km}$ the intensity would be only $\rlap{\raise{0.5ex}{\rule{10ex}{1px}}}28\ \mathrm{W/m^2}$. You probably wouldn't want to get too close to it. (see below)
So what happens:
- Not much, sails right through
- Lots of fireworks but no lasting damage
- Immediate global cataclysm
- (1) or (2) initially but the black hole settles at the center of the earth and eventually consumes the planet
- (4) but Hawking Radiation prevents net matter inflow and the black hole eventually evaporates in a burst of energy... but then, how much energy?
Correction: I did something wrong the first time in the Hawking Radiation Calculator... the actual luminosity would be $\approx 2.1 \times 10^{18}\ \mathrm W$, greater by 10 orders of magnitude. At $1000\ \mathrm{km}$ the flux would be about $167\ \mathrm{kW/m^2}$. So basically a significant fraction of the Earth's surface under the black hole's path would be sterilized, and as it approached the surface it would induce fusion. Not a pretty sight, and we're getting closer to Option 3 for a lot of people.