Meteorites—meteoroids that survive atmospheric entry
- Key People:
- Ernst Öpik
- Fred L. Whipple
- Related Topics:
- meteor shower
- bolide
- sporadic meteor
- fireball
- meteor stream
The effect of the final impact with the ground of meteoroids about a kilogram or less in mass is usually an anticlimax. The fall can go unnoticed even by those near the impact site, the impact being signaled only by a whistling sound and a thud. Many meteorites are recovered only because at least one fragment of the meteoroid strikes a house, car, or other object that draws the attention of local people to an unusual event. Recovered meteorites range in mass from a gram up to nearly 60 tons. Most meteorites consist either of stony—chiefly silicate—material (stony meteorites) or of primarily nickel-iron alloy (iron meteorites). In a small percentage of meteorites, nickel-iron alloy and silicate material are intermixed in approximately equal proportions (stony iron meteorites). For a comprehensive discussion of meteorites, see meteorite.
In addition to these relatively large meteorites, much smaller objects (less than a few millimetres across) can be recovered on Earth. The smallest, which are in the category of interplanetary dust particles and range from 10 to 100 μm in diameter, are generally collected on filters attached to aircraft flying in the stratosphere at altitudes of at least 20 km, where the concentration of terrestrial dust is low. On Earth’s surface, somewhat larger micrometeorites have been collected from locations where other sources of dust are few and weathering rates are slow. These include sediments cored from the deep ocean, melt pools in the Greenland ice cap, and Antarctic ice that has been melted and filtered in large amounts. Researchers also have collected meteoroidal particles outside Earth’s atmosphere with special apparatus on orbiting spacecraft, and in 2006 the Stardust mission returned dust that it had trapped in the vicinity of Comet Wild 2.
When meteoroids are sufficiently large—i.e.,100 metres to several kilometres in diameter—they pass through the atmosphere without slowing down appreciably. As a result, they strike Earth’s surface at velocities of many kilometres per second. The huge amount of kinetic energy released in such a violent collision is sufficient to produce an impact crater. In many ways, impact craters resemble those produced by nuclear explosions. They are often called meteorite craters, even though almost all of the impacting meteoroids themselves are vaporized during the explosion. Arizona’s Meteor Crater, one of the best-preserved terrestrial impact craters, is about 1.2 km across and 200 metres deep. It was formed about 50,000 years ago by an iron meteoroid that is estimated to have been roughly 50–100 metres across, equivalent to a mass of about four million tons. Myriad nickel-iron fragments and sand-grain-sized nickel-iron droplets have been found in and around the crater.
The geologic record of cratering on Earth (and many other bodies in the solar system) attests to the impact of meteoroids much more massive than the one that produced Meteor Crater, including objects with kinetic energies equivalent to as much as one billion megatons of TNT. Fortunately, impacts of this magnitude now occur only once or twice every 100 million years, but they were much more common in the first 500 million years of solar system history. At that time, as planet formation was winding down, the asteroid-size planetesimals that were left over were being swept up by the new planets. The intensity of the bombardment during this period, often referred to as the Late Heavy Bombardment, can be seen in the ancient, heavily cratered terrains of the Moon, Mars, Mercury, and many other bodies.
sSome scientists have suggested that very large impacts may have played a major role in determining the origin of life on Earth and the course of biological evolution. The first signs of life are found in rocks that are only slightly younger than the end of the Late Heavy Bombardment. Until the end of the Bombardment, life could have started many times but would have been repeatedly wiped out by large impacts that boiled the oceans and melted the surface rocks. When life did finally establish a foothold, it may have done so in the deep oceans or deep in the Earth’s crust where it would have been protected from all but the largest impacts. Later, once impact rates had dropped dramatically and life was well-established, rare large impacts may have altered the course of evolution by causing simultaneous extinctions of many species. Perhaps the best-known of these associations is the mass extinction believed by many scientists to have been triggered by a huge impact some 65 million years ago, near the end of the Cretaceous Period. The most-cited victims of this impact were the dinosaurs, whose demise led to the replacement of reptiles by mammals as the dominant land animals and eventually to the rise of the human species. The object responsible for this destruction is estimated to have been about 10 km across, and it produced a crater roughly 150 km in diameter that is thought to be buried under sediments off the Yucatán Peninsula in Mexico. For an assessment of the likelihood and the effects of the collision of objects from space with Earth, see Earth impact hazard.
Measurement of meteoroid orbits
Even though the likely sources of most meteoroids entering Earth’s atmosphere are known, the most direct way to determine the number and types of meteoroids coming from each of these sources is by measuring their orbits. When two or more observers at well-separated locations document the same meteor in the sky and determine its coordinates, the direction in which the meteoroid was moving in space before it encountered Earth—i.e., its radiant— can be estimated reasonably well by triangulation. To determine the meteoroid’s orbit, however, also requires ascertaining its speed.
This latter requirement was satisfied in the 1940s with the introduction of wide-field astronomical cameras specially designed for studying meteors. Each camera was equipped with a rotating shutter that interrupted the light to the photographic plate at a known rate. The resulting breaks in the photographed meteor streak permitted calculation of the speed of a meteor along its path. The position of the meteor’s trajectory with respect to the stars photographed on the same plate also was measured accurately. Information from such observations made at two or more stations could then be combined to calculate precisely the orbit of the meteoroid before it encountered Earth. About the same time, special radar instruments also were applied to the study of meteors generally fainter than those observed photographically.
A very significant development in meteor science occurred about two decades later. This was the establishment of large-scale networks for photographing very bright meteors, or fireballs. These networks were designed to provide all-sky coverage of meteors over about a million square kilometres of Earth’s surface. Three such networks were developed—the Prairie Network in the central United States, the MORP (Meteorite Observation and Recovery Project) network in the Prairie Provinces of Canada, and the European Network with stations in Germany and Czechoslovakia. The most complete set of published data was that of the Prairie Network, which was operated by the Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory (later merged into the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics) from 1964 to 1974.
Apart from measuring meteoroid orbits, one of the goals of the fireball networks was to determine probable impact areas based on the observed meteor paths and recover any surviving meteorites for laboratory studies. This would enable a comparison of the inferences of theory regarding the density and mechanical strength of meteoroids with “ground truth” provided by the study of the same meteorites in the laboratory. The networks compiled data that became the basis for a new outlook on meteor science and the sources of meteoroids, but the goal of recovering meteorites had only limited success. Only three meteorites were recovered, one by each of the networks. All three meteorites were ordinary chondrites, the most abundant type of stony meteorite.
In spite of this meagre recovery record, the study of the recovered meteorites not only confirmed that they came from the asteroid belt but also led to an improved understanding of what happens to meteoroids when they enter and travel through the atmosphere. This enabled better estimates of the physical properties of meteoroids, allowing researchers to distinguish between meteors resulting from dense, meteorite-like objects and meteors resulting from less substantial objects that, for instance, might come from comets. Prior to this effort, studies of meteors by astronomers and of meteorites by geochemists tended to be pursued as independent scientific fields that had little to contribute to each other.