Looks to be at least 50km off the coast over the North Sea.
Chris
***
Chris L Peterson
Cloudbait Observatory
https://www.cloudbait.com
On 2/20/2024 3:53 PM, drtanuki via Meteorite-list wrote:
List,
uk meteor w/ at least one fragmentation--
https://www.youtube.co
may have dropped material on land. Good
luck to my friends heading there for a search.
Graham
On Tue, Feb 14, 2023 at 3:55 PM Chris Peterson via Meteorite-list <
meteorite-list@meteoritecentral.com> wrote:
It was heading generally eastward over the Channel and was still burning
when it c
It was heading generally eastward over the Channel and was still burning
when it crossed the French shoreline. It is likely to have dropped
meteorites on land.
Chris
***
Chris L Peterson
Cloudbait Observatory
https://www.cloudbait.com
On 2/14/2023 3:29 AM, Graham E
To be fair, we are sitting right now on a planet worth a lot more than
that! And we don't have to go anywhere to investigate it.
Resource quantity isn't really the problem. It's accessing those resources.
Chris
***
Chris L Peterson
Cloudbait Observatory
https://www.
Chemical or liquid stain of some sort. Not part of the photographic image.
Chris
***
Chris L Peterson
Cloudbait Observatory
https://www.cloudbait.com
On 3/25/2022 2:09 AM, drtanuki via Meteorite-list wrote:
https://www.ebay.com/itm/RPPC-Dam-Construction-c-1910-MORAN
o entering dark flight)
seems like it could still be at least tens (more?) of miles away when it hits
the ground.
Mendy Ouzillou
-Original Message-
From: Meteorite-list On Behalf Of
Chris Peterson via Meteorite-list
Sent: Thursday, January 20, 2022 8:24 AM
To: meteorite-list@meteo
If you saw it break up near the horizon, any meteorites produced are 100
miles or more away from you. For meteorites to be within a few miles of
your location you would have seen it break up directly overhead.
Chris
***
Chris L Peterson
Cloudbait Observatory
https:/
I'd be very surprised if ownership wasn't retained by the operator. If
viewed as an accident scene, the rules would probably follow those of
aircraft. At the other extreme, this doesn't seem different from a car
that loses control and leaves a public street, crashing onto private
property. The
A meteoroid in space is nominally at or just above freezing (i.e. 0° C),
but there is a fair range around that, especially toward the higher end,
depending on its emissivity. It almost certainly will not be very cold.
Space is not "cold". It is, of course, dominated by radiative heating
and coo
One over Colorado on Thanksgiving morning, as well. May have been 100
times brighter than the full Moon. I've only recorded three fireballs
this bright in 20 years. Exploded high, and over rough terrain, so not
much hope of finding any surviving material. But an impressive event.
http://www.cl
he-space-place-tech/>
On Wed, Jan 17, 2018 at 11:03 AM, Chris Peterson via Meteorite-list <
meteorite-list@meteoritecentral.com> wrote:
It's not uncommon for large fireballs to produce seismic signatures.
They're created by atmospheric shock waves hitting the ground. The bo
It's not uncommon for large fireballs to produce seismic signatures.
They're created by atmospheric shock waves hitting the ground. The
bodies themselves are nowhere near large enough to reach the ground
intact, so all that kinetic energy never results in cratering. ("Never"
as in "only every f
Almost certainly not a Taurid.
Chris
***
Chris L Peterson
Cloudbait Observatory
http://www.cloudbait.com
On 11/17/2017 1:40 PM, Finbarr Connolly via Meteorite-list wrote:
Hello,
These Taurid fireballs are really putting on a show, here's yet another one
-
http://w
No, this isn't spam in the usual sense. It's clearly directed towards
meteor and meteorite people- long rants about how unfair the meteorite
classification system is. It's somebody who is very disgrunted, or
mentally ill. Or both.
Chris
***
Chris L Peterson
Cloudba
A weird little dialog between that sender and another at yeah.net has
been getting sent to the IMO info email address for the last week or so.
Complete lunacy, apparently.
Chris
***
Chris L Peterson
Cloudbait Observatory
http://www.cloudbait.com
On 8/12/2017 2:18 P
If you see a meteor that appears to strike the ground, it's probably
over 100 miles away. Maybe much more. That's because they stop burning
when they're a few tens of miles high.
Chris
***
Chris L Peterson
Cloudbait Observatory
http://www.cloudbait.com
On 7/22/2016
The fusion crust will likely be warmer than the interior when the
meteorite hits. Not because of residual heat from melting, but because
for the last few tens of seconds of the fall the meteorite was being
blasted with near-ambient temperature air. It was starting to warm up to
ambient- it simp
Also important is to consider that the body in space may well have been
a good fraction of a meter (or more) across. But a meteorite producing
body didn't just ablate, it most likely fragments. And the small
fragments very, very rapidly drop below the speed necessary to sustain
ablation. So wha
There's really no way for such a stone to be heated significantly by the
energy dissipated when crashing through a roof.
In all likelihood, the reason that observed falls are reported as hot is
because people expect hot, and confuse hot with cold. I don't think the
incidence of reports of heat
Hi Doug-
I don't think atmospheric extinction normally plays much of a role in
color perception of bright meteors. You don't get a full magnitude
difference between red and blue until you are about 15° above the
horizon, or about four air masses. And even at a magnitude difference,
I'd only e
I seek color in submitted witness reports, not necessarily to provide
additional scientific information (although it's data, so I wouldn't
completely rule out that possibility), but rather, to understand how
people see things differently, and to make for a more complete public
report, since pub
Meteor color is important. It's just not a very useful measure for
determining composition. Color changes with meteor speed and meteor
depth in the atmosphere. And certainly, the composition is a factor,
both in terms of chemical composition and bulk properties. But the
relationship is complex,
The whole issue of meteor color is complex. We now have many examples of
high resolution meteor spectra... but "color" is a physiological
phenomenon that isn't always easy to relate to physical spectra.
The light of meteors consists mostly of thermally broadened atomic
emission lines- lots of
Look closely at the full resolution video and you can see the meteor's
wings flapping!
Chris
***
Chris L Peterson
Cloudbait Observatory
http://www.cloudbait.com
On 4/16/2015 10:48 PM, Stephen Thompson via Meteorite-list wrote:
Nice catch !!..The motion, speed,
There is nothing definitive about it. The paper describes many factors
that could change the D/H ratio in different samples, and is much more
cautious in its conclusions than the typical press reports suggest:
"From the ROSINA measurements on comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko, we
conclude that t
It's certainly real. That's a typical meteor train dissipation pattern.
Chris
***
Chris L Peterson
Cloudbait Observatory
http://www.cloudbait.com
On 11/19/2014 7:17 PM, Robert Woolard via Meteorite-list wrote:
List,
One of our local radio stations posted this link
I caught this nearly overhead from central Colorado on my camera. I
believe it was probably the decaying COSMOS 2495 (Norad 39732). I should
have two angles on it tomorrow confirming that this was not a meteor.
Chris
***
Chris L Peterson
Cloudbait Observatory
http:/
Nope, I think not.
Chris
***
Chris L Peterson
Cloudbait Observatory
http://www.cloudbait.com
On 5/27/2014 4:52 PM, Art Jones via Meteorite-list wrote:
In the news from this am:
An Ohio man believes a meteorite hit his car early Sunday morning. Joe Massa of
Ketteri
It may depend on the choice of email client. I'm not seeing any
differences (using Thunderbird). I still see the sender in the "From"
field. If I click "Reply" it still goes to the sender. If I click "Reply
all" it still goes to the list and everyone else. If I click "Reply
list" (which I'm usi
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