Anyone remember this one? ;)

THE GREAT DAYLIGHT FIREBALL OF 1972

This grazing of our atmosphere would cause fusion crust. This means that the Great Fireball is a meteoroid with fusion crust.

Over Jackson Wyoming: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=It5EztnIdHc
Over Canada: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AaxagBP0IoY
http://apod.nasa.gov/apod/ap090302.html
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Great_Daylight_1972_Fireball
Earth Grazing Asteroids (PDF): http://www.lpi.usra.edu/meetings/lpsc1994/pdf/1142.pdf

Fusion Crusted Meteoroids.

The video shows a great example of it and science knows that this happens. How often it happens and how many are there is the question? If this happens once every 10,000 years (hypothetical) then that would mean there may be hundreds of thousands if not millions of them out there.

---------------------------
1 Every 10,000 years
100 Every 1 Million years
1000 Every 10 Million Years
10,000 Every 1 Hundred Million Years
100,000 Every 1 Billion Years
---------------------------

That's if you count just Earth. There are 7 other planets out there not counting Pluto. Keeping in mind the likelyhood of a meteoroid crossing the orbit of a planet at a shallow enough angle, are Neptune's, Uranus' and Saturn's, Jupiter's, Mars', Venus', and Mercury's atomospheres thick enough to bounce a meteoroid off of and create fusion crust? And if so could we safely say that there's hundreds of thousands if not millions of fusion crusted meteoroids and asteroids out there floating around? I would venture to "guess" that it might happen a bit more than once every 10,000 years. The odds are good that it happens far more often. Think about it for a second. What's the likelyhood that it would be caught on tape if it happened only once every ten thousand years? We see daylight fireballs many times per year, how many of those are Earth-Grazing meteoroids or asteroids and never burn up completely?

Can we agree that 70% of the meteorites that actually strike Earth land in the oceans since water covers 70% of the planet. Furthermore, since we only occupy a small percentage of available land mass then that leaves a HUGE amount of land that is either uninhabited or inhabited by native peoples that have no contact with the outside world. Meaning that any meteor fireball that passes over or impacts in these areas are NOT ever reported. I know we can make educated guesses about how many times this might happen based on observations from many points on our planet that we actually occupy.

Isn't there hard data out there on these types of actual Earth-Grazing meteoroids and asteroids? The ones that actually enter our atmosphere and then leave to go flying back out into our solar system. Based on that data couldn't you make "an educated guess"? Can't we take data from these events and figure the time between them and estimate a number, then divide that number into say 4.5 billion years? (If you figure the Earth and solar system is that old, which by the way is a guess too, albeit an educated one) I'm sure there will be people to argue this point to the end of time.

Still think there aren't many fusion crusted meteoroids out there?


______________________________________________
http://www.meteoritecentral.com
Meteorite-list mailing list
Meteorite-list@meteoritecentral.com
http://six.pairlist.net/mailman/listinfo/meteorite-list

Reply via email to