[meteorite-list] A Twisted Meteor Trail Over Tenerife
From: Matson, Robert D. <ROBERT.D.MATSON_at_meteoritecentral.com>
Date: Wed, 2 Jun 2010 16:51:40 -0700 Message-ID: <7C640E28081AEE4B952F008D1E913F170396CE03_at_0461-its-exmb04.us.saic.com> Hi Sterling, > If there was a "bump" during the last few seconds of a 1-minute exposure, > the exposure of the right-most 97% of the trail would be 97% complete -- > and straight. Only the left end would be "wiggled." Wiggling of the right > end would be very, very faint, if visible at all. Not a bump. I'm not sure I follow you. A bump (and the meteor) could have occurred at any time during the exposure, not just the beginning or end. > However, the sinusoidal "motion" can be traced back to the start of the > trail. There are slightly more than 8 full cycles recorded, each of > increasing amplitude. *Increasing* amplitude? So you are suggesting that the meteor was rising as seen by the observer? While this is certainly possible (e.g. a very shallow entry angle), it is far more likely that the meteor was moving left to right in this image, not right to left. I believe the bump (whether by wind, bat, bug, human or magna) occurred a little before the meteor first appeared, perfectly explaining the appearance of the trail: high initial amplitude, damped down to nothing after 8 or 9 cycles. --RobReceived on Wed 02 Jun 2010 07:51:40 PM PDT |
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