[meteorite-list] Fusion Crusted "Meteoroids"

Meteorites USA eric at meteoritesusa.com
Wed Mar 25 14:29:22 EDT 2009


Good points on the production and destruction rates.

Do we know how many meteoroids crash into the Sun or other planets? The 
moon is a good example to look for a number of impacting meteoroids, but 
it doesn't say how many will graze any given planet though. Unless of 
course you're able to figure a ratio of impacting versus grazing bodies. 
Does crossing through our atmosphere or the atmosphere of another planet 
change the orbit of a meteoroid? I imagine it would right? And would it 
come back to hit us again, maybe at a sharper angle? Or would it throw 
the meteoroid out into the cosmos never to be seen again?

This really does bring up lots of questions...





Chris Peterson wrote:
> Keep in mind during any analysis that small meteoroids are not in 
> stable orbits, and do not persist forever in the Solar System. There 
> are drag processes that produce a continual inflow of small objects 
> towards (and ultimately into) the Sun, and small objects (especially 
> in planet crossing orbits) are continually being perturbed. A 
> meteoroid that grazes a planet's atmosphere and receives a fusion 
> crust probably has a lifetime measured in millions of years at most, 
> and often much less. So you need to consider both the production and 
> destruction rate of fusion-crusted meteoroids.
>
> Also, I don't know that talking about absolute numbers is particularly 
> useful. Whether that number turns out to be large or small, it 
> certainly represents a vanishingly small percentage of the total 
> meteoroid population. You're very unlikely while in space to encounter 
> any meteoroids at all; it could take a ridiculously long time to find 
> one that had previously encountered a planet.
>
> Chris
>
> *****************************************
> Chris L Peterson
> Cloudbait Observatory
> http://www.cloudbait.com



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