[meteorite-list] Stardust SRC Hot to the touch?
From: Chris Peterson <clp_at_meteoritecentral.com>
Date: Wed Jan 18 10:54:53 2006 Message-ID: <059501c61c47$7f5f8520$f551040a_at_bellatrix> Hi Martin- The "mantra" that meteorites _must_ be cold is obviously incorrect. The reality is that meteorites _usually_ arrive with their surfaces near ambient and their interiors cool. A typical meteorite (to the extent that such a thing exists) is the product of fragmentation from a larger body. It is protected from the heat of entry right up to the moment of fragmentation. It then begins to heat, and a fusion crust forms, but this is probably only for a second or less (the low mass object slows very rapidly). There is no opportunity for the object to absorb much energy. It then falls through -40? air for several minutes, significantly reducing its temperature. So how does a meteorite manage to occasionally arrive hot? Probably the same way as Stardust. You need a near grazing entry angle and low speed, so that the cosmic velocity is lost at high altitude over a long time. This means that the deceleration and ram pressure are low enough that you don't get fragmentation (or very minimal fragmentation). There is also more time for the body to absorb energy. The size is also important. Too big and the heat capacity of the volume dominates- the energy that can be absorbed by the available surface area isn't enough to significantly heat the interior. Too small, and the interior will quickly equilibrate to air temperature during dark flight. Hot meteorites must occur, they just aren't very common ("hot" meaning a bit uncomfortable to the touch, not flaming or hot enough to start fires). There may be a slight bias towards hot meteorites in reports because the same conditions that can produce them (long, slow entries) are also responsible for the most impressive fireballs. Falls produced by more common, and less impressive entries, may be somewhat more likely to go unwitnessed. Chris ***************************************** Chris L Peterson Cloudbait Observatory http://www.cloudbait.com ----- Original Message ----- From: "Martin Horejsi" <accretiondesk_at_gmail.com> To: "Meteorite Mailing List" <meteorite-list_at_meteoritecentral.com> Sent: Wednesday, January 18, 2006 6:39 AM Subject: [meteorite-list] Stardust SRC Hot to the touch? Hi Ron and All, I am wondering why the Stardust SRC might arrive to earth too hot to touch, yet the mantra for meteorites is they must be cold even though history is littered with witnesses claiming the stones and irons were, you guessed it, too hot to touch. Here is an excerpt from the Stardust press kit, page: 14-15: Following a normal entry, the capsule will be hand-carried to the helicopter for trans- port. The capsule will be warm; temperature of the heat shield could be as high as 60 Celsius (140 Fahrenheit), so handlers will be required to wear protective gloves. Cheers, Martin Received on Wed 18 Jan 2006 10:54:42 AM PST |
StumbleUpon del.icio.us Yahoo MyWeb |