[meteorite-list] When the Moon hits your eye like a really, really, really big pizza pie
From: Sterling K. Webb <sterling_k_webb_at_meteoritecentral.com>
Date: Tue, 16 Jun 2009 16:38:45 -0500 Message-ID: <64435418004D47E99581CB5C3A280D53_at_ATARIENGINE2> Hi, List Everybody had a different theory about Carancas. I thought it was a fast entry of a cylindrical shape. Peter Schultz at Brown thought it was a fast entry of fragments that "entrained" themselves like railroad cars. The Russian theorist whose name flows off the tongue but vanishes from my anglo- phonic neurons thought it was a very slow entry and huge fragments that went plop! We all think we're right and we all disagree (almost) totally. Ain't science grand? But, for Carl's question about the "boiling" of the ground water that filled the crater, I have an answer. First the outer surface of the impactor was hot. The evidence is that it did ablate almost to the impact site. Second, its back half fragmented to powder on impact and the front half dug the crater and tossed dirt out. The impact energy heated the fragments. Third. Carancas had a lot of troilite, FeS, more than 15%. When hot troilite is exposed to water, it dissociates and generates hydrogen sulfide (H2S) which bubbled violently up through the crater water from the hot fragments and made the awful stink that the villagers reported and were ridiculed for. The water cooled everything down in a few minutes and the gas dissipated almost immediately, leaving no evidence of heat or sulfurous fumes, just as the soon-corkscrewed ablation trail that hung above the village was blown away in 10-12 minutes. Heat, yes, but not enough to boil the water. Sterling K. Webb ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- ----- Original Message ----- From: "JoshuaTreeMuseum" <joshuatreemuseum at embarqmail.com> To: <meteorite-list at meteoritecentral.com> Sent: Tuesday, June 16, 2009 3:11 PM Subject: [meteorite-list] When the Moon hits your eye like a really, really,really big pizza pie > Hi Carl, Eric: > > Wasn't it our own Sterling K. Webb that determined it was the > aerodynamic shape of the Carancas meteorite that was responsible for > the crater formation? Something about the difference between a > frisbee and the flat bottomed reentry space capsules? > > Phil Whitmer > ______________________________________________ > http://www.meteoritecentral.com > Meteorite-list mailing list > Meteorite-list at meteoritecentral.com > http://six.pairlist.net/mailman/listinfo/meteorite-list Received on Tue 16 Jun 2009 05:38:45 PM PDT |
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