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From: "Pat Brown" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "Robin Galyan" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>;
Sent: Sunday, April 08, 2007 10:15 PM
Subject: Re: [meteorite-list] fall patterns
Hi Robin,
The heavier parts of a body after breakup will fly
further. The lighter parts w
Hi Robin,
The heavier parts of a body after breakup will fly
further. The lighter parts will slow down faster and
not travel as fardown range. The reason for this is
that the smaller parts have more aerodynamic drag per
unit of mass and slow down quicker. The heaier parts
have less drag per unit
From: "Robin Galyan" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To:
Sent: Sunday, April 08, 2007 12:18 PM
Subject: [meteorite-list] fall patterns
> So what I am now trying to logicate is fall patterns.In particular the
> relationship of smaller chunks vs larger ones.
>
> Perhaps you can as
So what I am now trying to logicate is fall patterns.In particular the
relationship of smaller chunks vs larger ones.
Perhaps you can assist me in my thinking.
Say a breakup occurs and the debris is rushing in thru the atmosphere.
The heavier ones would fly straighter and faster right? (fu
So, basically with Chris' project recoveries are just meteor icing on the
cake, arguably free and piggybacked on a related effort. Chris, I predict you
will take up meteorite collecting the moment any recovery is made, and I hope
you get a piece of the meteorite (at any price) for which you
n"" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>;
Sent: Friday, July 15, 2005 5:13 PM
Subject: Re: [meteorite-list] Fall Patterns (& Latest Canadian Meteorite
Find)
By the way, what did those two projects end up costing to get the one
meteorite per 5
Chris and List;
Chris was commenting on my statements about the surge in fall recoveries in
India:
Here is another hypothesis: Was there a bright person somewhere in the area
that all of a sudden, say maybe 10 years ago or so, actually started to follow
up on reports of meteorite falls?
" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Cc: "Meteorite-list Meteoritecentral"
Sent: Friday, July 15, 2005 11:28 AM
Subject: Re: [meteorite-list] Fall Patterns (& Latest Canadian Meteorite
Find)
Hi Bob, Steve and all,
Steve #1 wrote: The Smithsonian and the Canadians, had
miserable re
Hi Bob, Steve and all,
Steve #1 wrote: The Smithsonian and the Canadians, had
miserable results with their "fireball image capturing
networks" over the long time they spent trying.
Without those results we wouldn't know that meteorites originated from
the asteroid belt. It was an impressive eff
- Original Message -
[meteorite-list] Fall Patterns
MeteorHntr at aol.com MeteorHntr at aol.com
Wed Jul 13 21:17:35 EDT 2005
+text deleted+
I know such a theory would be quite embarrassing to
both the Smithsonian and the Canadians, as they had
miserable results
Dana said:
The meteorites fall from April to July. So I think is
is safe to say its an annual event. Now that is
consistent! I mean if you bleed out your ears every
year for 10 yrs during the months of April-July
wouldn't you think that is consistent? Shit call this
indian/hillbilly stupid
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