[meteorite-list] Ram pressure question

Jeff Kuyken info at meteorites.com.au
Wed Nov 24 03:51:45 EST 2010


Hi Patrick,

This may help:

http://www.meteorites.com.au/odds&ends/myths.html

Cheers,

Jeff


----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Patrick Wiggins" <paw at wirelessbeehive.com>
To: <meteorite-list at meteoritecentral.com>
Sent: Wednesday, November 24, 2010 3:04 PM
Subject: [meteorite-list] Ram pressure question


> Hi all,
>
> Could someone please explain what "ram pressure" is?
>
> Has it got something to do with when air is compressed it heats up so when 
> a meteor passes through the atmosphere it compresses the air in front of 
> it causing the air's temperature to rise and it's that heat that ablates 
> all but the very small meteors?
>
> Many thanks,
>
> patrick
> N Utah USA
>
> On 23 Nov 2010, at 15:03, Chris Peterson wrote:
>
>> Heating is due to ram pressure for bodies larger than a few millimeters. 
>> For very small particles, ram pressure is not a factor because of the 
>> large distance between air molecules compared with the cross-sectional 
>> area. These small particles do heat up as the result of collisions with 
>> molecules, in a process that is analogous to friction.
>>
>> In other words, for all bodies that produce meteorites, frictional 
>> heating effects are insignificant.
>>
>> Chris
>>
>> *****************************************
>> Chris L Peterson
>> Cloudbait Observatory
>> http://www.cloudbait.com
>>
>>
>> ----- Original Message ----- From: "JoshuaTreeMuseum" 
>> <joshuatreemuseum at embarqmail.com>
>> To: <meteorite-list at meteoritecentral.com>
>> Sent: Tuesday, November 23, 2010 2:22 PM
>> Subject: [meteorite-list] Temperature of meteorites
>>
>>
>>> I was under the impression that it's a myth that direct friction from O 
>>> and N molecules on the surface of a meteorite create the heat that 
>>> causes ablation.  I thought that ram pressure in front of the meteorite 
>>> was the main factor in generating heat. The KE and PE would create a hot 
>>> shock layer which would flow back around the meteorite causing its outer 
>>> layer to melt.  I would think that friction is a minor factor,  unless 
>>> you're talking about ram pressure as a kind of friction.
>>>
>>> Phil Whitmer
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