[meteorite-list] meteoroid question
From: Pat Brown <scientificlifestyle_at_meteoritecentral.com>
Date: Sun, 4 Oct 2009 20:47:09 -0700 Message-ID: <BLU117-W211A83609B1CD577FCEEF1BDCF0_at_phx.gbl> Hello Larry and the List, This is an interesting and very commonly asked question that I have been asked in talks to school kids etc. I have tried to make it through Opik _Physics of Meteor Flight in the Atmosphere_. However, it is far too easy to get bogged down in the math. OK, that said; this engineer's guess is * An incoming velocity range of 15,000 to 25,000 gives an kinetic energy range of 2.8:1 * The entry angle could affect the time of incandescent flight as well. The ratio of 90 deg to almost zero deg could be a 2:1 ratio as well * Even if we limit ourselves to Chondrites, and assumed a constant speed and entry angle, the range of internal strength of the material is an important part of the answer. I tell the kids that the range of strength of the stone meteorites ranges from almost dirt clod weak (e.g. Bjurbole, Tagish Lake) where the survival percentage is perhaps 99% of mass loss. At the other end is a strong ordinary chondrite without internal cracks and little or no shock that could be in the 50% mass loss range. As an average, I have been telling the kids that basketball in space equils softball size when it reaches the surface. [For our international friends a basket ball is 0.74 meters in circumference and a softball is 0.30 meters in circumference.] Please do let us know what you get for answers from Rob Matson and the rest of the List. Best Regards, ?????????? Pat Brown ---------------------------------------- > Date: Sun, 4 Oct 2009 19:51:55 -0700 > From: lebofsky at lpl.arizona.edu > To: Meteorite-list at meteoritecentral.com > Subject: [meteorite-list] meteoroid question > > Hi all: > > I am involved with a teacher professional development workshop this week > and the teachers give us questions that they hope we can answer for them. > I am fine with most of them (such is Pluto a planet?), but I figured that, > before I give them a partially correct answer, I would ask the experts out > there for their responses: > > What is the rate at which things burn up when they enter Earth?s atmosphere? > > About how much material is burned up (mass per unit time)? > > Along that same idea, for a "typical" chondritic meteoroid, what is the > minimum size that you might expect to make it through the atmosphere and > land as a meteorite? Ballpark is fine since, clearly there are many > factors involved (initial velocity, angle of entry, material strength > etc.). > > Thanks in advance. > > Larry > > ______________________________________________ > http://www.meteoritecentral.com > Meteorite-list mailing list > Meteorite-list at meteoritecentral.com > http://six.pairlist.net/mailman/listinfo/meteorite-list _________________________________________________________________ Hotmail: Powerful Free email with security by Microsoft. http://clk.atdmt.com/GBL/go/171222986/direct/01/ Received on Sun 04 Oct 2009 11:47:09 PM PDT |
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