[meteorite-list] sulphurous smell of meteorites (was Temperature of meteorites)

Murray Paulson murray.paulson at gmail.com
Wed Nov 24 10:55:24 EST 2010


Hi Marco:

The short lived isotopes decayed 4.5 - 4.6 or so billion years ago,
and only warmed the acreeted asteroid at that time. They are but a
distant memory when the meteorite falls here on earth today.

As for hot rocks. I found Buzzard coulee specimens in the spring time
2009. The ones that were exposed to the sun, were nice and warm,
almost hot, when we picked them up. : )

Murray Paulson

On Wed, Nov 24, 2010 at 2:03 AM, Marco Langbroek
<marco.langbroek at wanadoo.nl> wrote:
> Piper et al.,
>
...........................>
> The same goes for reports of "very hot" meteorites.
>
> In more speculative moments, I have pondered a few times whether the decay
> of very shortlived radioisotopes in meteorites could play a role in reports
> of "glowing" and "hot" fresh-fallen meteorites as well. That is pure
> speculation that will probably not hold on closer scrutiny, however.
>
> - Marco
>
> -----
> Dr Marco (asteroid 183294) Langbroek
> Dutch Meteor Society (DMS)
>
> e-mail: dms at marcolangbroek.nl
> http://www.dmsweb.org
> http://www.marcolangbroek.nl
> -----
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