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http://www.spaceref.com/news/viewsr.html?pid=19437
It is interesting to note that as fast as Stardust is travelling. it sure doesn't hold a candle to meteorites. If I saw a meteor travelling like that I would have to conclude it probably isn't one but could be. some 90% of meteors travel at least twice more than Stardust did. |
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On Mon, 30 Jan 2006 18:49:10 GMT, "EP Guy" wrote:
It is interesting to note that as fast as Stardust is travelling. it sure doesn't hold a candle to meteorites. If I saw a meteor travelling like that I would have to conclude it probably isn't one but could be. some 90% of meteors travel at least twice more than Stardust did. Stardust's initial entry was at 12.8 km/s. The slowest possible meteor is 11 km/s, but most are much faster. Meteors that produce meteorites typically have the basic characteristics of the Startdust entry: slow speed and a shallow path. This combination allows the object to slow down while still quite high, before the ram pressures and drag forces become too high. While Stardust somewhat resembled a natural meteor, the way it brightened looked wrong. A natural meteor would produce a much more impressive trail, since over 90% of its mass would be lost to ablation. Obviously, that didn't occur with Stardust! _________________________________________________ Chris L Peterson Cloudbait Observatory http://www.cloudbait.com |
#3
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![]() "Chris L Peterson" wrote in message ... On Mon, 30 Jan 2006 18:49:10 GMT, "EP Guy" wrote: It is interesting to note that as fast as Stardust is travelling. it sure doesn't hold a candle to meteorites. If I saw a meteor travelling like that I would have to conclude it probably isn't one but could be. some 90% of meteors travel at least twice more than Stardust did. Stardust's initial entry was at 12.8 km/s. The slowest possible meteor is 11 km/s, but most are much faster. Is there an echo in here? |
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