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Published byErnest Baldwin Modified over 9 years ago
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Meteor seen Over Des Moines, Iowa
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The Loenid Meteor Shower
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The Loenid Meteor Shower
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Meteoroids, Meteors, and Meteorites Meteoroid refers to the small body in space Meteor refers to the body once it begins to vaporize in the Earth’s atmosphere Meteorite refers to the body if it survives to strike the ground
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Meteor breaking up over Altoona, PA, 1992
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The view from a meteoroid, 10 minutes before impacting earth
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Why Meteor Showers Occur
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Meteor Showers Too small to be seen with even the best telescopes. We see them only when they enter Earth’s atmosphere They move at about 30 times faster than a bullet from a rifle
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Meteor Showers Meteors are visible on any clear night, but major meteor showers include: - Perseid (August) - Leonid (November) - Geminid (December) During a shower, the meteors all appear to come from a single point in the sky called the radiant.
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Stony meteorite, collected in Arizona in April, 2001
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Iron meteorite
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Stony-Iron meteorite
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Meteorites Meteorites can be either iron, stony, or stony-iron Iron meteorites are shiny metal Stony meteorites are high in carbon content and are the most common Stony-iron meteorites are the rarest
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Asteroid
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Ida Dactyl Image from Galileo, 8/28/93 10,500 miles away
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Asteroid Locations Asteroids originate in two places: 1) The Main Belt, between Mars and Jupiter 2) The Trojan regions, along the orbital path of Jupiter
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Asteroid Locations
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Asteroid Belt
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Near-Earth Asteroid’s Orbit
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Near-Earth Asteroids
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Near-Earth Asteroids (Apollo Objects) Objects with orbits that cross Earth’s orbit About 1/3 will eventually be thrown into Sun Few will be thrown out of the Solar System Most will eventually strike a planet— maybe Earth!
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Near-Earth Asteroids (Apollo Objects) Earth is hit once every 250,000 years, on average These objects depart from their original positions in the Asteroid Belt due to collisions there. A 2km-wide object could hit Earth with the power of a 100,000 megaton bomb, and create a crater 20 km across.
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Near-Earth Asteroids Traffic Jam
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Sizes of Near-Earth Asteroids
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A Comet
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Halley’s Comet, March 1986
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Comet West, 1975
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Parts of a Comet Dust Tail Nucleus Coma Gas Tail
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Comets Nucleus can be 10 to 100 km in diameter Coma can be over 1,000,000 km in diameter—bigger than the Sun! The tail can be several billion km long Comets are made water ice, other ice, and rocky material
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Comet Hale-Bopp, April 1997
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Comets Originate in the Oort Cloud, a sphere- shaped cloud of ice bodies that surrounds the solar system Oort Cloud is 10,000 to 100,000 AU from the Sun Nearby stars may affect a comet’s orbit, sending it toward the center of the Solar System
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Comets may leave the Oort cloud…
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Comets The Kuiper Belt also may contain Comets. The Kuiper Belt is full of small, icy bodies beyond the planet Neptune
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Comets Comets that come closer to the Sun (and Earth!) do not last very long. Each time a comet approaches the Sun, it sheds ice and dust due to warmth A comet such as this may only last 100 to 1,000 orbits around the Sun.
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Barringer Meteor Crater, Arizona 50,000 years old 200 m deep
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What might an impact look like?
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200 million year-old crater Quebec, Canada
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Impacts on Earth The effects of an impact depend on: The size of the impacting body The speed of the impacting body The location of the impact The angle of the impact
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A major impact on Earth: All organisms near site of impact die instantly due to initial shock Same overall effects regardless of land or sea impact Sea impact would create tidal waves thousands of feet high that would go half way around globe
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A major impact on Earth: Atmosphere would fill with pulverized rock ejected from ground Heat would trigger massive forest fires everywhere Sunlight blocked, so reduced photosynthesis results in death of plants and animals far from impact site
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