The 2013 Chelyabinsk super bolide was the first "significant" impact event to occur in the age of social media and 24 hour news. Scientists, used to taking many days or weeks to analyze fireball events, were hard pressed to meet the immediate demands (within hours) for answers from the media, general public, and government officials. Fulfilling these requests forced many researchers to exploit information available from various Internet sources - videos were downloaded from sites like...
Topics: NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS), CHARACTERIZATION, BOLIDES, METEORITES, POSITION (LOCATION),...
Empirical studies have documented an association between rock type and the cathodoluminescence color of constituent quartz grains. Quartz from extrusive igneous sources luminesces uniform pale blue. Quartz from intrusive igneous and high-grade metamorphic rocks generally luminesces darker purple-blue, whereas quartz recrystallized under low-grade metamorphic conditions luminesces reddish-brown. Quartz grains in most sandstones luminesce a heterogeneous mixture of these colors because the grains...
Topics: NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS), CATHODOLUMINESCENCE, COLOR, GEOCHRONOLOGY, METAMORPHISM...
We have employed three-dimensional numerical simulations of the impact of Comet Shoemaker-Levy 9 (SL9) on Jupiter and the resulting vapor plume expansion using the smoothed particle hydrodynamics (SPH) method. An icy body with a diameter of 2 km can penetrate to an altitude of -350 km (0 km = 1 bar) and most of the incident kinetic energy is transferred to the atmosphere between -100 to -250 km. This energy is converted to potential energy of the resulting gas plume. The unconfined plume...
Topics: NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS), ATMOSPHERIC ENTRY, BOLIDES, COMETARY COLLISIONS,...
The study of mass extinction events has largely focused on defining an environmental factor or factors that might account for specific patterns of faunal demise. Several hypotheses elaborate on how a given environmental factor might affect fauna directly, but differentially, causing extinction in certain taxa but not others. Yet few studies have considered specific habitat changes that might result from natural vegetation processes or from perturbations of vegetation. The role of large-scale...
Topics: NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS), BIOMASS, EXTINCTION, FORESTS, GEOCHRONOLOGY, HABITATS,...
Late Wenlockian (late mid-Silurian) life is characterized by three significant changes or bioevents: sudden development of massive carbonate reefs after a long interval of limited reef growth; sudden mass mortality among colonial zooplankton, graptolites; and origination of land plants with vascular tissue (Cooksonia). Both marine bioevents are short in duration and occur essentially simultaneously at the end of the Wenlock without any recorded major climatic change from the general global warm...
Topics: NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS), BOLIDES, CLIMATE CHANGE, CLIMATOLOGY, GEOCHRONOLOGY,...
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EA heeft een nieuwe trailer beschikbaar gesteld, waarin te zien hoe is dat Need for Speed: The Run een hoop Europese bolides bevat.
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The spatial and temporal distribution of vegetation in the terminal Cretaceous of Western Interior North America was a complex mosaic resulting from the interaction of factors including a shifting coastline, tectonic activity, a mild, possibly deteriorating climate, dinosaur herbivory, local facies effects, and a hypothesized bolide impact. In order to achieve sufficient resolution to analyze this vegetational pattern, over 100 megafloral collecting sites were established, yielding...
Topics: NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS), BIOLOGICAL EVOLUTION, CLIMATE CHANGE, EXTINCTION,...
Highly energetic bolide impacts occur and their flux is known. For larger bodies the energy release is greater than for any other short-term global phenomenon. Such impacts produce or release a large variety of shock induced changes including major atmospheric, sedimentologic, seismic and volcanic events. These events must necessarily leave a variety of records in the stratigraphic column, including mass killings resulting in major changes in population density and reduction or extinction of...
Topics: NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS), CLIMATE CHANGE, EXTINCTION, GEOCHEMISTRY, METEORITE...
Two types of fundamental topological junctions of elements are deduced from a nonlinear thermodynamical model. Using this scheme, the possibility of a causal relation between fireballs and faint meteors as nonlinear sources on the one hand, and noctilucent clouds (NC) and Hoffmeister's enhanced airglow (EA) as complementary formative processes in the middle atmosphere and ionosphere, on the other hand, is examined. The principal role of the global atmospheric circulation in this relation is...
Topics: NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS), AIRGLOW, ATMOSPHERIC CIRCULATION, METEORITES, NOCTILUCENT...
Since the discovery of the Ir enrichment in Cretaceous-Tertiary boundary clays in 1980, the effects of a 10-km asteroid impacting on the Earth 65 Ma ago have been discussed as the possible reason for the mass extinction--including the extinction of the dinosaurs--at the end of the Cretaceous. But up to now no crater of this age that is large enough (ca. 200 km in diameter) has been found. One candidate is the Kara Crater in northern Siberia. Kolesnikov et al. determined a K-Ar isochron of 65.6...
Topics: NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS), ASTEROIDS, CLAYS, CRETACEOUS-TERTIARY BOUNDARY, HYPERVELOCITY...
There is strong evidence that a comet nucleus consists of a single object whose basic structure is Whipple's icy conglomerate. A number of cometary phenomena indicate that the nucleus is a low density, fragile object with a large degree of radial uniformity in structure and composition. Details of the ice-dust pattern are more uncertain. A working model is proposed which is based on theories of accumulation of larger objects from grains. This nucleus is a distorted spherical aggregate of a...
Topics: NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS), ASTRONOMICAL MODELS, COMET NUCLEI, COSMIC DUST, EVOLUTION...
Being the only U.S. Government entity charged with monitoring the meteor environment, the Meteoroid Environment Office has deployed a network of all sky and wide field meteor cameras, along with the appropriate software tools to quickly analyze data from these systems. However, the coverage of this network is still quite limited, forcing the incorporation of data from other cameras posted to the internet in analyzing many of the fireballs reported by the public and media. A procedure has been...
Topics: NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS), BOLIDES, METEOROIDS, METEOROID CONCENTRATION, BRIGHTNESS,...
This thesis presents a method for detecting outlier meteors and bolides within Doppler radar data using unsupervised machine learning. Principal Component Analysis (PCA), k-means Clustering, and t-Distributed Statistical Neighbor Embedding (t-SNE) algorithms are introduced as existing methods for outlier detection. A combined PCA and t-SNE method that uses a Nearest Neighbor Density Pruning method for dataset size reduction is also described. These methods are implemented to classify unlabeled...
Topics: asteroids, bolides, meteors, artificial intelligence, machine learning, unsupervised machine...
Past cratering studies have focused primarily on crater morphology. However, important questions remain about the nature of crater deposits. Phenomena that need to be studied include the distribution of shock effects in crater deposits and crater walls; the origin of mono- and polymict breccia; differences between local and distal ejecta; deformation induced by explosive volcanism; and the production of unshocked, high-speed ejecta that could form the lunar and martian meteorites found on the...
Topics: NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS), CRATERING, EARTH CRUST, EJECTA, EXPLOSIONS, HYPERVELOCITY...
The structure of the older-than-3.2-Ga Archean basement and Archean-to-Precambrian sedimentary/volcanic rocks (3.07 to ca. 2.2 Ga) in the center of the Witwatersrand Basin to the southwest of Johannesburg (South Africa) is dominated by the ca. 2.0-Ga megascopic Vredefort 'Dome' structure. The effect of the 'Vredefort event' is demonstrably large and is evident within a northerly arc of about 100 km radius around the granitic core of the structure. Northerly asymmetric overturning of the strata...
Topics: NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS), BOLIDES, BRITTLENESS, DEFORMATION, DOMES (STRUCTURAL FORMS),...
In the morning hours of October 8, 2009, a bright object entered Earth's atmosphere over South Sulawesi, Indonesia. This bolide disintegrated above the ground, generating stratospheric infrasound returns that were detected by infrasonic stations of the global International Monitoring System (IMS) Network of the Comprehensive Nuclear-Test-Ban Treaty Organization (CTBTO) at distances up to 17 500 km. Here we present instrumental recordings and preliminary results of this extraordinary event....
Topics: NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS), BOLIDES, INFRASONIC FREQUENCIES, AERIAL EXPLOSIONS,...
Impulse-generated waves (tsunamis) may be produced, at varying scales and global recurrence intervals (RI), by several processes. Meteorite-water impacts will produce tsunamis, and asteroid-scale impacts with associated mega-tsunamis may occur. A bolide-water impact would undoubtedly produce a major tsunami, whose sedimentological effects should be recognizable. Even a bolide-land impact might trigger major submarine landslides and thus tsunamis. In all posulated scenarios for the K/T boundary...
Topics: NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS), BOLIDES, METEORITE COLLISIONS, SEDIMENTS, SHEAR STRESS,...
The Ozone Mapping Profiler Suite (OMPS) Limb Profiler (LP) on the recently launched NASA/NOAA NPP/ Suomi satellite detected aerosol excess in the midstratosphere (25-45 km altitude) between 50degN and 70degN latitudes. OMPS/LP observations trace this aerosol plume to the meteor that struck near Chelyabinsk, Russia on 15 February 2013. This new dust layer, located above the Junge aerosol layer, has persisted over at least a 3 month period. Material collected on the ground following the bolide...
Topics: NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS), AEROSOLS, ATMOSPHERIC MODELS, BOLIDES, STRATOSPHERE,...
In the course of carrying out finite difference calculations, it was discovered that for large craters, a previously unrecognized type of crater (diameter) growth occurred which was called lip wave propagation. This type of growth is illustrated for an impact of a 1000 km (2a) silicate bolide at 12 km/sec (U) onto a silicate half-space at earth gravity (1 g). The von Misses crustal strength is 2.4 kbar. The motion at the crater lip associated with this wave type phenomena is up, outward, and...
Topics: NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS), ATMOSPHERIC EFFECTS, BOLIDES, CRATERING, METEORITE CRATERS,...
Large body impact has been implicated as the possible cause of several extinction events. This is entirely plausible if one accepts two propositions: (1) that impacts of large comets and asteroids produce environmental effects severe enough to cause significant species extinctions and (2) that the estimates of comet and asteroid flux for the Phanerozoic are approximately correct. A resonable next step is to investigate the possibility that impact could be a significant factor in the broader...
Topics: NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS), BIOMASS, EXTINCTION, GEOCHRONOLOGY, METEORITE COLLISIONS,...
The construction of small, inexpensive all-sky cameras designed specifically for the NASA Fireball Network is described. The use of off-the-shelf electronics, optics, and plumbing materials results in a robust and easy to duplicate design. Engineering challenges such as weather-proofing and thermal control and their mitigation are described. Field-of-view and gain adjustments to assure uniformity across the network will also be detailed.
Topics: NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS), CAMERAS, BOLIDES, ATMOSPHERIC HEATING, ALL SKY PHOTOGRAPHY,...
The temperature and internal energy fields calculated by Takata et al. in the plume are used to calculate the greybody thermal radiation emitted versus wavelength to predict what might be observed by several spectral sensors operating from different platforms when fragments of Comet Shoemaker-Levy 9 (SL-9) impact Jupiter in July 1994. A SPH code was used by Takata et al. to calculate the full three dimensional flow and thermodynamic fields in the comet fragment and the atmosphere of Jupiter. We...
Topics: NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS), BOLIDES, COMETARY COLLISIONS, HYPERVELOCITY IMPACT, JUPITER...
Previous analyses of meteoroid compositional groupings have utilized the end height of fireballs as a diagnostic tool. From an observational perspective this definition is straight forward, but from a theoretical viewpoint there are problems with using this operational definition. In order to realistically assess the estimated geometric uncertainty of + 1 km in the observed end height, a theoretical definition of the end height of meteoritic fireballs is proposed using the results from the...
Topics: NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS), BOLIDES, HEIGHT, KINETIC ENERGY, METEORITIC COMPOSITION,...
The global climatic effects of dust generated by the impact of a 10 km-diameter bolide was simulated using a one-dimensional (vertical only) globally-averaged climate model by Pollack et al. The goal of the simulation is to examine the regional climate effects, including the possibility of coastal refugia, generated by a global dust cloud in a model having realistic geographic resolution. The climate model assumes the instantaneous appearance of a global stratospheric dust cloud with initial...
Topics: NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS), ATMOSPHERIC EFFECTS, ATMOSPHERIC MODELS, BOLIDES, CLIMATE...
We have completed preliminary calculations of the minimum sizes of bolides that would penetrate various hypothetical Martian atmospheres with surface pressures ranging from 6 to 1000 mbar for projectiles of various strengths. The calculations are based on a computer program. These numbers are used to estimate the diameter corresponding to the turndown in the crater diameter distribution due to the loss of these bodies, analogous to the dramatic turndown at larger sized already discovered on...
Topics: NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS), ATMOSPHERIC DENSITY, ATMOSPHERIC MODELS, ATMOSPHERIC...
A fireball was photographed with a luminous trajectory below a height of 20 km. On Aug. 3, 1984, seven stations photographed this slow moving fireball, which traversed 94 km of luminous trajectory in 9.2 sec and terminated its visible flight at a height of 19.1 km. The computed dark flight trajectory intersected the surface close to Valec, a small village 40 km west of Brno. The Valec fireball was the lowest photographed fireball ever. The Valec fireball was photographed by fish eye cameras....
Topics: NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS), ASTRONOMICAL PHOTOMETRY, BOLIDES, DESCENT TRAJECTORIES,...
We examined the von Mises and Mohr-Coulomb strength models with and without damage effects and developed a model for dilatancy. The models and results are given in O'Keefe et al. We found that by incorporating damage into the models that we could in a single integrated impact calculation, starting with the bolide in the atmosphere produce final crater profiles having the major features found in the field measurements. These features included a central uplift, an inner ring, circular terracing...
Topics: NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS), METEORITE CRATERS, METEORITIC DAMAGE, GEOMORPHOLOGY, MODELS,...
The atmospheric trajectory is calculated of a particularly well studied fireball and train during the 1999 Leonid Multi-Instrument Aircraft Campaign. Less than a minute after the meteor's first appearance, the train curves into a '2'-shape, which persisted until at least 13 minutes after the fireball. We conclude that the shape results because of horizontal winds from gravity waves with a scale height of 8.3 km at 79-91 km altitude, as well as a westerly wind gradient with altitude. In...
Topics: NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS), LEONID METEOROIDS, BOLIDES, METEOR TRAILS, WIND EFFECTS,...
This volume is a compilation of articles reflecting the current state of knowledge on the physics, chemistry, astronomy, and aeronomy of small bodies in the solar system. The articles included here represent the most recent results in meteor, meteoroid, and related research fields and were presented May 24-28, 2010, in Breckenridge, Colorado, USA at Meteoroids 2010: An International Conference on Minor Bodies in the Solar System.
Topics: NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS), METEOROIDS, AERONOMY, REFLECTION, BOLIDES, ASTEROIDS, COMETS,...
Being the only U.S. Government entity charged with monitoring the meteor environment, the Meteoroid Environment Office (MEO) has deployed a network of allsky and wide field meteor cameras, along with the appropriate software tools to quickly analyze data from these systems. However, the coverage of this network is still quite limited, forcing the incorporation of data from other cameras posted to the internet in analyzing many of the fireballs reported by the public and media. Information on...
Topics: NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS), BOLIDES, METEOROIDS, CCD CAMERAS, FIELD OF VIEW, INTERNETS,...
Abrupt increases in the rate of magnetic reversals (magnetic reversal spurts) were first studied by many others. They hypothesized that spurts result from increased turbulence in the earth's core dynamo during episodes of intense bolide bombardment of the earth. Mechanisms for creating episodes of intense bombardment of the earth involve gravitational perturbation of the Oort cloud of comets, either by a hidden planet, a solar companion, or massive matter in the galactic plane. Herein, the time...
Topics: NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS), EXTINCTION, GEOCHRONOLOGY, MAGNETIC FIELD INVERSIONS,...
We present two papers of the near-infrared observations from Palomar observatory of the impact of fragment R of comet Shoemaker-Levy 9 with Jupiter on July 21, 1994. The first paper is concerned with the lightcurves found from these observations: Two instruments were used to image the event at 3.2 and 4.5 microns simultaneously. The lightcurves from these image sequences both show two faint precursor flashes, a bright main peak, and several oscillations over the following hour. We identify the...
Topics: NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS), ASTRONOMICAL OBSERVATORIES, BOLIDES, COMETARY COLLISIONS,...
Evidence is discussed that the wide-spread fires ca. 800 years ago which denuded the southern provinces of the South Island of New Zealand of the extensive forests present at that time were due to the entry of a large bolide into the atmosphere, the conflagration being ignited by the intense heat generated as this extraterrestrial projectile ablated/detonated in a similar manner to that of the Tunguska object of 1908. These fires led to the extinction of the giant terrestrial bird known as the...
Topics: NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS), BOLIDES, FOREST FIRES, IMPACT, HISTORIES, NEW ZEALAND, Steel,...
Several abrupt changes in conodont biofacies are documented to occur synchronously at six primary control sections across the Frasnian-Famennian boundary in Euramerica. These changes occurred within a time-span of only about 100,000 years near the end of the latest Frasnian linguiformis Zone, which is formally named to replace the Uppermost gigas Zone. The conodont-biofacies changes are interpreted to reflect a eustatic rise followed by an abrupt eustatic fall immediately preceding the late...
Topics: NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS), EXTINCTION, FOSSILS, GEOCHRONOLOGY, GLACIAL DRIFT,...
One of the intriguing facets of the Cretaceous-Tertiary extinction is the apparently selective pattern of mortality amongst taxa. Some groups of organisms were severely affected and some remained relatively unscathed as they went through the K/T boundary. While there is argument concerning the exact interpretation of the fossil record, one of the best documented extinctions at the Cretaceous-Tertiary boundary is that of the calcareous nannoplankton. These organisms include coccolithic algae and...
Topics: NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS), ALGAE, EXTINCTION, GEOCHRONOLOGY, MARINE BIOLOGY, MARINE...
The goal is to use a global three-dimensional atmospheric circulation model developed for studies of atmospheric effects of nuclear war to examine the time evolution of atmospheric effects from a large bolide impact. The model allows for dust and NOx injection, atmospheric transport by winds, removal by precipitation, radiative transfer effects, stratospheric ozone chemistry, and nitric acid formation and deposition on a simulated Earth having realistic geography. Researchers assume a modest 2...
Topics: NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS), ATMOSPHERIC CIRCULATION, ATMOSPHERIC COMPOSITION, ATMOSPHERIC...
Since Alvarez et al., discovered a worldwide approx. cm-thick layer of fine sediments laden with platinum group elements in approximately chondritic proportions exactly at the Cretaceous-Tertiary (C-T) boundary, and proposed bolide-impact as triggering mass extinctions, many have studied this hypothesis and the layer itself with its associated spherules and shocked quartz. At issue is whether the mass extinctions, and this horizon has an impact versus volcanic origin. A critical feature of the...
Topics: NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS), CARBON DIOXIDE CONCENTRATION, ENVIRONMENT EFFECTS,...
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Hawthorne, M. F.; Wiersema, R. J.; Takasugi, M
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In vitro studies using boron-labeled antibodies and elemental boron as neutron target in therapy for tumors and cancer
Topics: MASS, METEOROIDS, TRAJECTORY ANALYSIS, BOLIDES, LUMINOUS INTENSITY, METEORITES, PHOTOMETRY