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Mission goals of a 1998/1999 Leonid storm Multi-instrument Aircraft Campaign (MAC)

Authors :
Jenniskens, P
Butow, S
Source :
Exozodiacal Dust Workshop.
Publication Year :
1998
Publisher :
United States: NASA Center for Aerospace Information (CASI), 1998.

Abstract

In November of 1998 (or in 1999 with about equal probability) will be our one chance in a lifetime to anticipate with some certainty the occurrence of a meteor storm. For a period of up to 2 hours, rates are expected to increase above 1 meteor per second for a naked eye observer. At that time, Earth passes through the outer regimes of the dust trail of comet 55P/Tempel-Tuttle. The high meteor flux offers unprecedented precision in characterizing the dust trail in terms of spatial and particle size distributions of dust grains and allows the measurement of composition, morphology and orbits of individual cometary grains relatively soon after ejection from the comet. By using the Earth's atmosphere as a detector for the dust trains, grains are sampled over a wide mass range, from the typical grain size of zodiacal dust (40 - 200 micron) up until the rare boulders that can still be lifted off the comet nucleus.

Subjects

Subjects :
Astronomy

Details

Language :
English
Database :
NASA Technical Reports
Journal :
Exozodiacal Dust Workshop
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsnas.19980219287
Document Type :
Report