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  • 1
    Publication Date: 1990-01-01
    Print ISSN: 0148-0227
    Electronic ISSN: 2156-2202
    Topics: Geosciences
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 1995-01-01
    Print ISSN: 0148-0227
    Electronic ISSN: 2156-2202
    Topics: Geosciences
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 2018-06-12
    Description: Since early 2006, NASA s Marshall Space Flight Center has been routinely monitoring the Moon for impact flashes produced by meteoroids striking the lunar surface. During this time, several meteor showers have produced multiple impact flashes on the Moon. The 2006 Geminids, 2007 Lyrids, and 2008 Taurids were observed with average rates of 5.5, 1.2, and 1.5 meteors/hr, respectively, for a total of 12 Geminid, 12 Lyrid, and 12 Taurid lunar impacts. These showers produced a sufficient, albeit small sample of impact flashes with which to perform a luminous efficiency analysis similar to that outlined in Bellot Rubio et al. (2000a, b) for the 1999 Leonids. An analysis of the Geminid, Lyrid, and Taurid lunar impacts is carried out herein in order to determine the luminous efficiency in the 400-800 nm wavelength range for each shower. Using the luminous efficiency, the kinetic energies and masses of these lunar impactors can be calculated from the observed flash intensity.
    Keywords: Space Sciences (General)
    Type: Meteoroids: The Smallest Solar System Bodies; 142-154; NASA/CP-2011-216469
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  • 4
    Publication Date: 2018-06-12
    Description: Lunar impact monitoring provides useful information about the flux of meteoroids in the hundreds of grams to kilograms size range. The large collecting area of the night side of the lunar disk, approximately 3.8 10(exp 6)sq km in our camera field-of-view, provides statistically significant counts of the meteoroids striking the lunar surface. Over 200 lunar impacts have been observed by our program in roughly 4 years. Photometric calibration of the flashes observed in the first 3 years along with the luminous efficiency determined using meteor showers and hypervelocity impact tests (Bellot Rubio et al. 2000; Ortiz et al. 2006; Moser et al. 2010; Swift et al. 2010) provide their impact kinetic energies. The asymmetry in the flux on the evening and morning hemispheres of the Moon is compared with sporadic and shower sources to determine their most likely origin. These measurements are consistent with other observations of large meteoroid fluxes.
    Keywords: Space Sciences (General)
    Type: Meteoroids: The Smallest Solar System Bodies; 116-124; NASA/CP-2011-216469
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  • 5
    Publication Date: 2018-06-12
    Description: The flash of thermal radiation produced as part of the impact-crater forming process can be used to determine the energy of the impact if the luminous efficiency is known. From this energy the mass and, ultimately, the mass flux of similar impactors can be deduced. The luminous efficiency, eta, is a unique function of velocity with an extremely large variation in the laboratory range of under 6 km/s but a necessarily small variation with velocity in the meteoric range of 20 to 70 km/s. Impacts into granular or powdery regolith, such as that on the moon, differ from impacts into solid materials in that the energy is deposited via a serial impact process which affects the rate of deposition of internal (thermal) energy. An exponential model of the process is developed which differs from the usual polynomial models of crater formation. The model is valid for the early time portion of the process and focuses on the deposition of internal energy into the regolith. The model is successfully compared with experimental luminous efficiency data from both laboratory impacts and from lunar impact observations. Further work is proposed to clarify the effects of mass and density upon the luminous efficiency scaling factors. Keywords hypervelocity impact impact flash luminous efficiency lunar impact meteoroid 1
    Keywords: Space Sciences (General)
    Type: Meteoroids: The Smallest Solar System Bodies; 125-141; NASA/CP-2011-216469
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  • 6
    Publication Date: 2019-07-19
    Description: Since early 2006 the Meteoroid Environment Office at NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center has been consistently monitoring the Moon for impact flashes produced by meteoroids striking the lunar surface. During this time, several meteor showers have produced multiple impact flashes on the Moon. The 2006 Geminids, 2007 Lyrids, and 2008 Taurids were observed with average rates of 5.5, 1.2, and 1.5 meteors/hr, respectively, for a total of 12 Geminid, 11 Lyrid, and 12 Taurid lunar impacts. These showers produced a sufficient, albeit small sample of impact flashes with which to perform a luminous efficiency analysis similar to that outlined in Bellot Rubio et al. for the 1999 Leonids. An analysis of the Geminid, Lyrid, and Taurid lunar impacts is carried out herein in order to determine the luminous efficiency in the 400-900 nm wavelength range for each shower. Using the luminous efficiency, the kinetic energies and masses of these lunar impactors can be calculated.
    Keywords: Astrophysics
    Type: M10-0221 , Meteroids 2010; May 24, 2010 - May 28, 2010; Breckenridge, CO; United States
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  • 7
    Publication Date: 2019-08-28
    Description: The field line interhemispheric plasma (FLIP) model is used to study the 6300 A line intensity measured during three morning twilights from the McDonald Observatory in Texas. The Imaging Spectrometric Observatory (ISO) measured the 6300 A intensity during the winter of 1987 and the spring and summer of 1988. The FLIP model reproduces the measured intensity and its variation through the twilight well on each day using neutral densities from the MSIS-86 empirical model. This is in spite of the fact that different component sources dominate the integrated volume emission rate on each of the days analyzed. The sensitivity of the intensity to neutral composition is computed by varying the N2, O2, and O densities in the FLIP model and comparing to the intensity computed with the unmodified MSIS-86 densities. The ion densities change self-consistently. Thus the change in neutral composition also changes the electron density. The F2 peak height is unchanged in the model runs for a given day. The intensity changes near 100 deg SZA are comparable to within 10% when either (O2), (N2), or (O) is changed, regardless of which component source is dominant. There is strong sensitivity to changes in (N2) when dissociative recombination is dominant, virtually no change in the nighttime (SZA greater than or equal to 108 deg) intensity with (O2) doubled, and sensitivity of over 50% to doubling or halving (O) at night. When excitation by conjugate photoelectrons is the dominant nighttime component source, the relative intensity change with (O) doubled or halved is very small. This study shows the strong need for simultaneous measurements of electron density and of emissions proportional to photoelectron fluxes if the 6300 A twilight airglow is to be used to retrieve neutral densities.
    Keywords: GEOPHYSICS
    Type: Journal of Geophysical Research (ISSN 0148-0227); 100; A5; p. 7839-7853
    Format: text
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  • 8
    Publication Date: 2019-07-12
    Description: A technique is developed that can be used to derive the total intensity of band emissions from twilight airglow measurements when the basic spectral signature of the band to be considered is known. The method is designed to automatically extract total band or line intensities of a signal imbedded in background radiation several orders of magnitude greater in brightness. It is shown that the technique developed can reliably measure the intensity of both weak and strong band and line emissions in the presence of strong twilight background radiation. The method of extraction is shown as part of a general purpose spectral analysis program written in VAX FORTRAN. This extraction procedure has been used successfully on emissions of Fel, Ca(+), N2(+) (1N) (0-0) and (0-1), OH in the near UV. OI red (630nm) and green (558nm) lines in the visible, and the OH Meinel bands and O(+) (2P) 732 nm in the near IR.
    Keywords: GEOPHYSICS
    Type: Journal of Geophysical Research (ISSN 0148-0227); 95; 15227-15
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  • 9
    Publication Date: 2019-07-11
    Description: The Genesis spacecraft reentry represented a unique opportunity to observe a "calibrated meteor" from northern Nevada. Knowing its speed, mass, composition, and precise trajectory made it a good subject to test some of the algorithms used to determine meteoroid mass from observed brightness. It was also a good test of an inexpensive set of cameras that could be deployed to observe future shuttle reentries. The utility of consumer-grade video cameras was evident during the STS-107 accident investigation, and the Genesis reentry gave us the opportunity to specify and test commercially available cameras that could be used during future reentries. This Technical Memorandum describes the video observations and their analysis, compares the results with a simple photometric model, describes the forward scatter radar experiment, and lists lessons learned from the expedition and implications for the Stardust reentry in January 2006 as well as future shuttle reentries.
    Keywords: Spacecraft Design, Testing and Performance
    Type: NASA/TM-2005-214192 , M-1154
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  • 10
    Publication Date: 2019-07-17
    Description: The location of poleward and equatorward boundaries are used as diagnostics of substorm phase and energy storage in the magnetosphere. Boundaries are estimated from groundbased observations (all sky imagers, meridian scanning photometers, and magnetometers), from in situ particle observations, and from spacebased global auroral observations. Each observational technique has relative advantages. However, recent studies suggest caution when comparing boundaries derived from different methods. in the study, FUV auroral images from the POLAR Ultraviolet Imager are used to estimate auroral boundaries. These boundaries are then compared with similar boundaries derived from DMSP in situ particle precipitation observations and from groundbased meridian scanning photometers. The goal is to see how well the boundaries from these three dissimilar observations correlate, to estimate dependencies on instrumental capabilities, i.e. imager resolution, and to serve as a potential first step to derive an algorithm for finding oval boundaries from groundbased optical data.
    Keywords: Geophysics
    Type: Dec 01, 1998; San Francisco, CA; United States
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