[meteorite-list] October 4th fireball northeast of Flagstaff
From: Matson, Rob D. <ROBERT.D.MATSON_at_meteoritecentral.com>
Date: Sat, 11 Oct 2014 21:31:00 +0000 Message-ID: <4A4FA25E4DFE584AA580F4F069F9B4401CE43709_at_EMP-EXMR104.corp.leidos.com> Hi All, Sorry for the premature end -- fat-fingered the send key apparently. Continuing: Steve was also good enough to travel out to the Bellemont NWS site that took an image of the smoke trails several minutes after the fireball. He wrote: "Yesterday at Bellemont Weather Station right under and in line with the camera that took shots of the smoke clouds, I determined that they were at between 35 and 36 degrees magnetic readings. These reading are as close as I can determine as to the position of the clouds that day; 5 to 6 min later. ..." "Bellemont Weather Station: Average 35.5 degrees NE add 10.5 degrees for Celestial Pole, making it 45.5 degrees NE from Celestial North." Using Google Earth and aligning the view with Fremont Peak, I measured an azimuth of 55.6 degrees to the lower smoke trail (which is the more important one). The higher cloud has an azimuth less than 1 degree to the left (i.e. lower azimuth) than the lower cloud. This is a large discrepancy between the two of us -- some 10 degrees. I'm confident that the accuracy on my measurement is better than 1 degree. Looking at Google Earth, I suspect he was aligning off the wrong peak. 45-degree azimuth points to Mt. Humphreys, not Fremont Peak. Another good smoke trail image was taken from downtown Flagstaff, about a half-mile southeast of Steve. It is a little more difficult to measure the angles in this image, but 1-degree accuracy is certainly achievable. I measured an angle of 47-degrees to the lower cloud, very consistent with the 46.5-degree terminal azimuth I got for Steve's camera. That the angle is slightly higher can easily be explained by a few minutes of eastward drift by the cloud. The 10-mile separation between the Bellemont and downtown Flagstaff cameras is enough to get a decent range estimate to the cloud. This range is further confirmed by a third dust trail image taken from much further to the east. Cheers, Rob Received on Sat 11 Oct 2014 05:31:00 PM PDT |
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