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Impacting Bodies: Surviving Entry through Earths Atmosphere

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The atoms and molecules of the Earth's atmosphere strike like a hot ... skeptics and believe that it was a UFO, or an Anti-matter explosion, not a meteor. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Impacting Bodies: Surviving Entry through Earths Atmosphere


1
Impacting Bodies Surviving Entry through
Earths Atmosphere
2
A Few Definitions
  • Meteoroids
  • Meteors
  • Meteorites
  • Bolides

3
Once in the Atmosphere
  • The atoms and molecules of the Earths atmosphere
    strike like a hot stream of gas
  • The air pushes atoms away from the surface of the
    impacting body
  • Molecular bonds begin to break
  • Kinetic energy ? thermal energy

4
Once in the Atmosphere/Contd/
  • The impacting body becomes incandescent
  • The surface becomes a liquid
  • Atoms lose electrons ? plasma
  • Eventually body turns into very hot vapor/gas
  • Temperature may rise up to 50,000K (90,000 F)

5
Descending into atmosphere
  • Density of atmosphere increases rapidly (doubles
    for each 5 km of altitude lost)
  • Pressure of hot air decelerates body
    (deceleration increases with the square of
    velocity)
  • Terminal speed is often reached, as body cannot
    overcome the atmospheric drag
  • Increasing T and pressure tend to flatten and
    spread the meteor (i.e. crash it into tiny powder)

6
Meteor Storms
  • Produced by encounters of Earth with dense dust
    swarms
  • Swarms are about the size of a grain of sand
  • The grains become incandescent
  • Vaporize when they collide with the earths
    atmosphere at huge speed
  • Examples Leonids, Andromendids, Taurids, etc

7
Leonids
8
Factors for survival
  • Size Larger the size, deeper the penetration
    into the atmosphere
  • Suitable composition Nickel, Iron
  • Density High _at_ 8 times that of water
  • Entry Speed Low, 11 km/sec being the lowest
  • Entry Angle Shallow, if its too steep the
    object will burn up, if its too shallow the
    object will bounce off the top of the atmosphere
  • Area-to-Mass-Ratio Objects with larger ratio
    cool more easily, greater chance to survive

9
The shape factor
  • The slender, low-drag body from fig a) would
    experience more severe heating and deceleration
    loading than the blunt body in figure b). If,
    however, the latter body were oriented in the
    position shown in figure c), a lift force would
    be developed and it would assume a more shallow
    path of descent with less heating and loading.

10
Which One Will Survive??
  • 40-meter asteroid
  • Solid nickel composition
  • Same mass as comet
  • Might reach the ground
  • intact
  • 100-meter cometary object
  • Icy Composition
  • Density ½ that of water
  • Would blow up at a high
  • altitude

11
Reaching the Surface Intact
  • A 50-meter asteroid has a 1 chance of reaching
    the surface intact
  • A 100-meter asteroid has a strong chance of a
    cratering event
  • We expect that a high velocity object (60-70
    km/sec) is less likely to survive to the surface
    than a low speed object (12-15 km/sec)
  • Particles smaller than 0.1 millimeters in size
    (100 microns) gradually reach the surface,
    typically we see those 10-100 microns in size

12
Reaching the Surface Intact/contd/
  • An icy projectile with a size less than 20-meters
    might be expected to survive to the ground if it
    has a very low entry speed
  • Similarly, a rocky body smaller than about
    8-meters would survive if it had a low entry
    speed
  • Higher speeds require an object to be larger in
    size to survive entry through the atmosphere
  • More detailed analysis implies that minimum sizes
    of about 50-meters for rocky bodies and
    100-meters for icy ones
  • Smaller, metallic asteroids can penetrate the
    atmosphere, but these comprise only 3 of the
    impactor flux

13
What About Venus??
  • Earths atmosphere prevents objects roughly less
    than 100-meters in size from reaching the ground
  • Venus has an atmosphere that is dense, with a
    surface pressure 100 times that of Earth
  • Objects smaller than 1 kilometer do not penetrate
    to the surface
  • Not many particles reach the surface because of
    the temperature, pressure (100 bars), carbon
    dioxide atmosphere, and the sulfuric acid
    droplets in the clouds

14
The Separated Fragments Model
  • Computer simulation developed by researchers
    Bland and
  • Artemieva to predict the likelihood of asteroids
    with a diameter
  • up to one kilometer exploding in the atmosphere
    or hitting Earths
  • surface
  • Pancake Model
  • -treats the cascade of asteroid fragments as a
    single
  • continuous liquid that spreads out over a larger
    area, to form a
  • pancake
  • New Model
  • -more realistic, calculates motion, aerodynamic
    loading, and
  • ablation (dissipation of heat generated by
    atmospheric friction), for
  • Each separated fragment in a disrupted impactor

15
The Experiment
  • Performed over 1,000 simulations using both
    models
  • Consisted of 16 simulations for stony impactors
    and 16
  • for iron impactors, for bodies from 1 to 108 kg,
    repeating
  • each simulation for a given mass more than 20
    times to
  • derive average impact conditions

16
The Results
  • Comparing model outputs, both gave similar
    estimates of total surviving material at the
    surface for irons, but the same was not true for
    stones
  • Pancake model signifcantly overestimated
    impactor
  • survivability for stones over the whole mass
    range
  • Simulations also allowed for the determination
    of impact
  • survivability rates for iron and stone, which
    corresponded closely with crater records and
    meteorite data

17
  • In meteorite falls, the proportion of stones
    decreases steadily at
  • higher masses
  • In the range of 4e4 to 2e8 kg, less than 5 of
    terrestrial impactors
  • are stones
  • Stony asteroids need to be 1,000 times larger
    than the iron ones
  • to enter the atmosphere and make a similar sized
    crater.
  • Impactor fragments at least 3 meters across that
    are capable of forming a crater 100 meters wide
    will strike the Earth once every 200 to 400
    years, with more than 95 being made of iron

18
The Importance of the Separated Fragments Model
  • Suggests that Earth is not as vulnerable to
    extraterrestrial impacts as previously thought
  • Similar simulations may provide insight on the
    cratering rates on other celestrial objects with
    atmospheres, such as Venus or Mars

19
Historically Very few meteoroids make it
through the atmosphere of earth and impact the
ground. Everyday over 100 tons of meteoroids
come down through the atmosphere toward earth.
Most days we do not even see the tracks of this
debris, but a few times in the past they have
made it through the atmosphere and caused
significant damage. The three main historical
meteor incidents that will be looked from oldest
to most recent are the Chicxulub cater near the
Yucatan Peninsula, the Barringer Meteor in
Arizona, and the Tunguska event in Siberia.
20
Chicxulub Impact
  • The Chicxulub impact near the Yucatan is now
    thought to have possibly caused the extinction of
    dinosaurs 65 million years ago. It is believed
    that the meteoroid was about 10 km in diameter
    and made a grater roughly 100 km in diameter.
    This meteor was so incredibly large and massive
    that the atmosphere had little effect on it. It
    collided with earth with a force greater than any
    human can imagine. An object of this size is
    estimated to collide with earth about every
    50-100 million years.

21
Barringer Meteor
  • The Barringer Meteor while much less massive
    then the Chucxulub once was much more recent,
    being dated back to about 50,000 years. It was
    about 50 m in diameter, large enough to cause
    significant damage. An asteroid this size hits
    earth about once every 1000 years.

22
Tunguska Event
  • On June 30th, 1908 at about 720 A.M., an
    explosion occurred over the Tungus River in
    Siberia. The explosion was so massive that it
    was light at night in London for the next few
    nights. This explosion is thought to be a meteor
    exploding above the ground.
  • While the Tunguska meteoroid was roughly the
    same size as the Barringer one, it had a
    different effect. It exploded about 6-10 km
    above Earths surface due to many variables, such
    as velocity, material, mass, and entry angle.
    Some scientists believe that the meteor was stony
    and not made of nickel. In tests done after, in a
    similar scenario, stony asteroids of the same
    mass, velocity, diameter, and angle would explode
    at about 9 km altitude. Others are skeptics and
    believe that it was a UFO, or an Anti-matter
    explosion, not a meteor. Lets not pay attention
    to these theories since we are astronomers not
    quacks.

23
Tunguska Event /contd/
  • The Tunguska Event played an important role in
    modeling for modern day scientists and
    understanding how meteoroids will approach and
    react with the surface of earth. It thought that
    most meteors with less than a 100 m diameter will
    not strike the Earth with the exception of a few
    heavy metal ones. While the Tunguska Event
    exploded in the atmosphere, a ground collision
    would have produced much more energy and
    devastation.
  • There is evidence that there was much radiation
    released from the Tunguska Event and a comet or
    and asteroid exploding should not cause this, how
    did this happen?
  • We think of the atmosphere as our shield,
    should we rely on it that much?
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