When a meteoroid enters the atmosphere

  • Thread starter yasar1967
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In summary, scientists use numerical analysis and historical data to estimate the amount of kinetic energy converted to heat when a meteor enters the atmosphere. Most of the heat is generated through rapid compression of air, rather than friction, and the temperature of the meteor's surfaces can become very high before it is balanced out by heat output. The chance of a meteorite hitting the ground is dependent on its chemical composition, with "dirty snowballs" usually exploding in the atmosphere and metallic objects needing to be a certain size to make it to the ground. Rapid compression of air can also generate enough heat to ignite fires, as seen in Indonesia.
  • #1
yasar1967
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When a meteoroid enters the atmosphere and becomes a meteor, it burns due to great fraction between the rock and and the air. But how scientists calculate the exact amount of kinetic energy converted to heat due to fricton and how much of this is used to heat up the rock and how much of it is used to heat up the air surronds it? Can they quantitatively analyze each part of its journey until it hits the ground?
 
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  • #2
yasar1967 said:
When a meteoroid enters the atmosphere and becomes a meteor, it burns due to great fraction between the rock and and the air. But how scientists calculate the exact amount of kinetic energy converted to heat due to friction and how much of this is used to heat up the rock and how much of it is used to heat up the air that surrounds it? Can they quantitatively analyze each part of its journey until it hits the ground?

I'm not entirely sure about this, but I suspect that the problem is analysed numerically (using a computer/supercomputer), using the Navier-Stokes equations. The problem is really very complex, and involves both frictional effects (stokes drag) and the creation of a turbulent wake behind the meteoroid, which leads to a stark pressure difference which slows the meteoroid down. This is just a guess though, I'm not in the business of atmospheric meteoroid modelling. It's also possible that they analyse historical meteoroid data to watch for trends and thus build up empirical models.
 
  • #3
Most of the heat is due to a very high amount of compression of the air, not friction. The amount of heat generated is very large, and the temperature of the object's surfaces becomes very high before it the heat output through radiation and convection via the air balance out the heat input, usually high enough to burn up the meteor.
 
  • #4
Be aware that the chance of a meteorite penetrating Earth's atmosphere to a "ground event" has a great deal to do with it's chemical composition.
 
  • #5
pallidin said:
Be aware that the chance of a meteorite penetrating Earth's atmosphere to a "ground event" has a great deal to do with it's chemical composition.

You are correct. The two general classifications are "dirty snowballs" and "metallic".
Dirty snowballs usually explode high in the atmosphere, often referred to as a bolide event.
Metallic objects have to be a certain size to penetrate the atmosphere and hit the ground.
Near Odessa, TX, several years ago, an object hit the ground near a little league ball game. The boys who picked it up told the reporter that it was very hot when they picked it up but that within a few minutes is was very cold. This makes sense when you realize how cold space is and how little time friction had to heat up the object.
 
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  • #6
rcgldr said:
Most of the heat is due to a very high amount of compression of the air, not friction. The amount of heat generated is very large, and the temperature of the object's surfaces becomes very high before it the heat output through radiation and convection via the air balance out the heat input, usually high enough to burn up the meteor.

Rapid compression of air can generate such levels of heat that Indonesions have used two bamboo tubes forming a piston chamber combination with a little tinder in the chamber to ignite fires. When the piston is forced down into the chamber the tinder ignites.
 

What is a meteoroid?

A meteoroid is a small rocky or metallic object that is smaller than an asteroid and orbits around the sun.

What happens when a meteoroid enters the atmosphere?

When a meteoroid enters the Earth's atmosphere, it begins to heat up and glow due to friction with the air. This glowing trail of light is called a meteor or shooting star.

How fast do meteoroids travel when they enter the atmosphere?

Meteoroids can travel at speeds ranging from 11 km/s to 72 km/s when they enter the Earth's atmosphere. The speed depends on the size, composition, and angle of entry of the meteoroid.

Do all meteoroids reach the Earth's surface?

No, most meteoroids burn up completely in the Earth's atmosphere and never reach the surface. Only larger and more dense meteoroids have a chance of reaching the surface and becoming meteorites.

Can meteoroids cause damage when they enter the atmosphere?

Yes, if a meteoroid is large enough and does not completely burn up in the atmosphere, it can cause damage upon impact with the Earth's surface. However, this is rare and most meteoroids are small enough to disintegrate in the atmosphere.

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