Hostname: page-component-848d4c4894-8kt4b Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-06-19T05:33:23.175Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Optical Search for High Meteors in Hyperbolic Orbits

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  27 February 2018

S.C. Woodworth
Affiliation:
Physics Engineering and Geoscience Dept., Mount Allison University, Sackville, N.B., Canada E0A 3C0
R.L. Hawkes
Affiliation:
Physics Engineering and Geoscience Dept., Mount Allison University, Sackville, N.B., Canada E0A 3C0

Abstract

Core share and HTML view are not available for this content. However, as you have access to this content, a full PDF is available via the ‘Save PDF’ action button.

Dual-station image intensified television studies have indicated very few meteors at heights greater than 120 km, and few statistically significant hyperbolic orbits. However, the optimum intersection height for these studies was about 95 km, and the relatively small fields of view resulted in a bias against high (and therefore fast) meteors. We have developed height sensitivity correction factors, and found that short baseline television studies resulted in relatively little bias against high meteors, and the absence of meteors above 120 km appears to be real. We report preliminary results from a three-station, image-intensified video meteor detection system sensitive to apparent magnitude about +9.5 with optimum intersection heights 115-125 km. We have detected neither particularly high meteors nor meteors in clearly hyperbolic orbits. We conclude that the proportion of true hyperbolic meteors in the mass range 10-4 to 10-6 kg is less than a few percent, and that optical meteors corresponding to meteoroids in this mass range do not ablate at heights above approximately 120 km. We suggest several ways to reconcile these results with southern hemisphere radar studies.

Type
II. Meteors
Copyright
Copyright © Astronomical Society of the Pacific 1996

References

Baggaley, W.J., Taylor, A.D., & Steel, D.I., 1993a, in Meteoroids & Their Parent Bodies, Stohl, J. & Williams, I.P, Bratislava: Astron. Inst. Slovak Acad. Sci., 53 Google Scholar
Baggaley, W.J., Taylor, A.D., & Steel, D.I., 1993b, in Meteoroids & Their Parent Bodies. Stohl, J. & Williams, I.P., Bratislava: Astron. Inst. Slovak Acad. Sci., 245 Google Scholar
Baguhl, M., Hamilton, D.P., Grün, E., Dermott, S.F., Fechtig, H., Hanner, M.S., Kissel, J., Lindblad, B.A., Linkert, D., Linkert, G., Mann, I., McDonnell, J.A.M., Morfill, G.E., Polanskey, C., Riemann, R., Schwehm, G., Staubach, P., & Zook, H.A., 1995, Science, 268, 1016 Google Scholar
Grün, E., Gustafson, B., Mann, I., Morfill, G.E., Staubach, P., Taylor, A., & Zook, H.A., 1994, Astron. Astrophys., 286, 915 Google Scholar
Hajdukova, M., 1994, Astron. Astrophys., 288, 330 Google Scholar
Hawkes, R.L., 1993, in Meteoroids & Their Parent Bodies, Stohl, J. & Williams, I.P., Bratislava: Astron. Inst. Slovak Acad. Sci., 227 Google Scholar
Hawkes, R.L. & Jones, J., 1975, Mon. Not. R. astr. Soc, 173, 339 Google Scholar
Hawkes, R.L. & Jones, J., 1986, Q. Jl. R. astr. Soc., 27, 569 Google Scholar
Hawkes, R.L., Jones, J., & Ceplecha, Z., 1984, Bull. Astron. Inst. Czech., 35, 46 Google Scholar
Hawkes, R.L., Mason, K.I., Fleming, D.E.B., & Stultz, C.T., 1993, in Proceedings International Meteor Conference, Belgium: IMO, 28 Google Scholar
Jones, J. & Hawkes, R.L., 1975, Mon. Not. R. astr Soc., 171, 159 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Jones, J. & Sarma, T., 1985, Bull. Astron. Inst. Czech., 36, 103 Google Scholar
Öpik, E.J., 1941, Pub. Astron. Observ. Tartu, 30, 6 Google Scholar
Sarma, T. & Jones, J., 1985, Bull. Astron. Inst. Czech., 36, 9 Google Scholar
Steel, D.I., 1988, in Dust in the Universe, Bailey, M.E. & Williams, D. A., Cambridge: Cambridge Univ Press, 187 Google Scholar
Stohl, J., 1970, Bull. Astron. Inst. Czech., 21, 10 Google Scholar
Ueda., M. & Fujiwara, Y., 1994, Earth, Moon & Planets (in press)Google Scholar