Re: [Meteorite-list] re: Astroids associated with meteorites (McSween)

2005-05-30 Thread MexicoDoug
Elton wrote:

Hello Jerry,

You probably are thinking of Meteorites  and Their Parent Bodies 2nd 
Edition by  Harry (Hap ) McSween, Jr  

Hola Jerry,

Regarding Asteroids, I also highly recommend Meteorites  and Their Parent 
Planets Second ed.  It's a book that always has a new gem  of interesting 
information waiting for you when you pick it up.  A guide  to echinoids, 
asteroids 
and crinoids:) is also useful if you like Earthly  asteroids, but:

The nicest astroids are actually from the imaginations of  kids that prefer 
math to fingerpainting.  Did you ever have a Spirograph(R)  set when you were 
growing up?  The basic astroid can be drawn with a ring  whose radius is 4 
times the radius of a circle you trace inside it resulting in  a diamond shape 
with concave shapes.  If you vary the length you get  cycloidal designs 
(including awesome psychedelic astroid families best in two or  three colors - 
which 
kept me for one, very occupied in those younger days  for longer than I'll 
likely admit, and probably still would if I had a  set.)

And in elliptical orbits, that same concaved sided diamond astroid  shape can 
be used to constrain (form an envelope which contains the orbital  ellipse) 
of it if the average of the aphelion and perihelion are known, but not  their 
indivual values which could come in handy with comets or even meteoroids  if 
you are really into this stuff.

Hope this adds another dimension to  the question...Saludos, Doug
 
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Re: [Meteorite-list] re: Astroids associated with meteorites (McSween)

2005-05-29 Thread E. L. Jones

Hello Jerry,

You probably are thinking of Meteorites and Their Parent Bodies 2nd 
Edition by  Harry (Hap ) McSween, Jr -- whist not assisting on the 
Martian projects is from my alma mater, the Univ. of Tennessee @Knoxville.


(IMHO) until the Nortons came along with Rocks in Space and 
subsequently the Cambridge Encyclopedia of Meteorites,  Parent 
Bodies1st and 2nd eds were the best available modern text on meteorites.


McSween, as I recall, compared albedos and specific spectra from various 
asteroid families with those of various classes of meteorites to 
associate them with their parent bodies.  You'll do well to add this 
reference and used versions are on Amazon now for under $10.


http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/tg/detail/-/0521587514/002-2622076-9595205?v=glance

Regards,
Elton

Gerald Flaherty wrote:


Hello List,
I read within the past several months a section of a book which 
associtates various meteorites with their supposed parent body. I 
can't remember the book title. If there are more than one I'd 
appreciate as many references as I can get because I have the book 
that I'm refering to in my library.

Can anyone refresh my memory?
Thanks in advance.
Jerry Flaherty


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