Research Shows Why Meteoroids
Explode before they Reach Earth
By Kayla Zacharias,Perdue University
WEST LAFAYETTE , Ind. – December 11, 2017 -- Our atmosphere
is a better shield from meteoroids than researchers thought, according to a new
paper published in Meteorites &
Planetary Science.
Explode before they Reach Earth
By Kayla Zacharias,
When
a meteor comes hurtling toward Earth, the high-pressure air in front of it
seeps into its pores and cracks, pushing the body of the meteor apart and
causing it to explode.
“There’s
a big gradient between high-pressure air in front of the meteor and the vacuum
of air behind it,” said Jay Melosh,
a professor of Earth, Atmospheric and
Planetary Sciences at Purdue
University and co-author
of the paper. “If the air can move through the passages in the meteorite, it
can easily get inside and blow off pieces.”
Researchers
knew that meteoroids often blew up before they reached the Earth’s surface, but
they didn’t know why. Melosh’s team looked to the 2013 Chelyabinsk
event, when a meteoroid exploded over Chelyabinsk ,
Russia , to
explain the phenomenon.
The
explosion came as a surprise and brought in energy comparable to a small
nuclear weapon. When it entered Earth’s atmosphere, it created a bright fire
ball. Minutes later, a shock wave blasted out nearby windows, injuring hundreds
of people.
The
meteoroid weighed around 10,000 tons, but only about 2,000 tons of debris were
recovered, which meant something happened in the upper atmosphere that caused
it to disintegrate. To solve the puzzle, the researchers used a unique computer
code that allows both solid material from the meteor body and air to exist in
any part of the calculation.
“I’ve
been looking for something like this for a while,” Melosh said. “Most of the
computer codes we use for simulating impacts can tolerate multiple materials in
a cell, but they average everything together. Different materials in the cell
use their individual identity, which is not appropriate for this kind of
calculation.”
This
new code allowed the researchers to push air into the meteoroid and let it
percolate, which lowered the strength of the meteoroid significantly, even if
it had been moderately strong to begin with.
While
this mechanism may protect Earth’s inhabitants from small meteoroids, large
ones likely won’t be bothered by it, he said. Iron meteoroids are much smaller
and denser, and even relatively small ones tend to reach the surface.
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