[meteorite-list] friction or ram pressure?
From: Chris Peterson <clp_at_meteoritecentral.com>
Date: Sat, 25 Jan 2014 08:23:40 -0700 Message-ID: <52E3D6FC.6050908_at_alumni.caltech.edu> Your understanding is broadly correct, although I don't think "friction" is quite the right word to describe the heating process for particles smaller than about a centimeter. The mechanism of heating depends on the particle size and on the mean free path of atmospheric molecules (and therefore on height). For centimeter scale particles, most of the heating is the result of creating a compressed gas zone along the leading edge. For millimeter scale particles the heating involves collisional processes. Not surprisingly, there's an intermediate range where both processes are operating. Chris ******************************* Chris L Peterson Cloudbait Observatory http://www.cloudbait.com On 1/25/2014 7:54 AM, Francesco Moser wrote: > Hi all! > I have a question for you regarding falling stars and fireballs! > Which is the physical process that heats a meteoroid during his travel through the atmosphere? > Is the friction with the air molecules or the ram pressure of the shock wave in front of the meteoroid? > > I think, but maybe I'm wrong: > for the smaller meteoroids like the one that generate the falling stars the main process is the friction, instead for the bigger meteoroid like the one that generate meteorite on the ground or for example for a Space Ship like the Space Shuttle the main process is the ram pressure ... I'm right? > > Thanks a lot!!! > > <x>x<x>x<x> > Francesco Received on Sat 25 Jan 2014 10:23:40 AM PST |
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