Okay, now I think, I know a little better, what you suggest. Let me ask some questions.
The separated footprints, didn't they go downhill? Does that mean, you think the rocket stage crashed somewhere downhill? How could it be responsible for snow on the tent?
(Plus I myself can not imaging cutting my tent, even if it collapses on top of me, but that's a different aspect.)
So the ravine 4 tried to retreat from the den. Where to? What had happened to the others by then? Why did they separate? Why did Zina, Igor and Rustem try to go back up the hill?
There is mentioning of someone climbing the tree:
Maslennikov
”The lower dry branches of the cedar were broken up to 2 m high. Somebody climbed the tree, because the branches 4 or 5 m high were also broken.”
And I thought I read somewhere, that traces of skin or something were found on the cedar, but I can't find that one right now, so maybe I imagined that...
So what do you suggest happened to the branch?
About the eyes, it seems, that it would be possible to have a blast that doesn't hurt the ears but the eyes get hurt even though by shrapnel. So you might have a point there...
About the cloud: I don't care what exact form you imagine. I think that's rather beside the point. Relevant is: Where do you think the aggregation of gas would build up? And yes, if it is enough, it's possible that heat or a spark would ignite it. But: If it's ignited by heat of the crashed rocket, the gas must be near enough. If it's ignited by the fire by the cedar, it must be close enough to said fire. And if it is, I would imaging, that it'd singe the Yuris as well as some trees.
I very well can imagine the gas cloud being far enough away from the tent not to hurt that and far away from the cedar not to hurt the trees there. But then the central point of ignition can't be near the tent or the fire at the cedar. And if it can't be close to the tent but was ignited by the rocket somehow, then the rocket too must have been quite some distance away from the tent. Leading back to the question why its crash influenced the area of the tent that much, that the hikers left it in panic, even if they couldn't see what was happening outside. We have to keep in mind, that that tent was somewhat of their lifeline, their lifesaver in an ocean of snow and cold and loneliness.