[meteorite-list] strewnfield size vs entry angle

2006-03-05 Thread stan .
I'm sure the data I'm looking for doesnt exist in a handy format anywhere, but I figured I'd ask the smart people of the meteorite list incase it does. does any one know of a handy tabular collection of data on meteoriod entry angle vs strewnfield ellipse dimensions for various types of stone

Re: [meteorite-list] strewnfield size vs entry angle

2006-03-05 Thread Chris Peterson
* Chris L Peterson Cloudbait Observatory http://www.cloudbait.com - Original Message - From: stan . [EMAIL PROTECTED] To: Meteorite-list@meteoritecentral.com Sent: Sunday, March 05, 2006 8:22 AM Subject: [meteorite-list] strewnfield size vs entry angle I'm sure the data I'm

Re: [meteorite-list] strewnfield size vs entry angle

2006-03-05 Thread stan .
Chris, Thanks for the detailed reply. What about a listing of strenfield dimensions sorted by type of stone? Thanks. Stan From: Chris Peterson [EMAIL PROTECTED] To: Meteorite-list@meteoritecentral.com Subject: Re: [meteorite-list] strewnfield size vs entry angle Date: Sun, 5 Mar 2006 08:39:55

Re: [meteorite-list] strewnfield size vs entry angle

2006-03-05 Thread Rob McCafferty
I know a formula does exist for this because I did my 3rd year undergraduate project on exactly this and I and another student wrote it. It involved a lot of empirical evidence and formulating a formula which fitted the very few properly observed falls and seeing if it could be extrapolated to

Re: [meteorite-list] strewnfield size vs entry angle

2006-03-05 Thread Chris Peterson
: Re: [meteorite-list] strewnfield size vs entry angle I know a formula does exist for this because I did my 3rd year undergraduate project on exactly this and I and another student wrote it. It involved a lot of empirical evidence and formulating a formula which fitted the very few properly

Re: [meteorite-list] strewnfield size vs entry angle

2006-03-05 Thread Rob McCafferty
://www.cloudbait.com - Original Message - From: Rob McCafferty [EMAIL PROTECTED] To: Meteorite-list@meteoritecentral.com Sent: Sunday, March 05, 2006 9:31 AM Subject: Re: [meteorite-list] strewnfield size vs entry angle I know a formula does exist for this because I did my 3rd year

[meteorite-list] Strewnfield size

2004-12-02 Thread bernd . pauli
Paul Mc Cartney ;-) wrote: I'm doing some research and found a interesting anomaly. The strewnfield for Kendleton is 2 miles. Most strewnfields I've read about are normally 5-15 miles long for stone meteorites. Anyone heard of a 2 mile strewnfield? Here are a few strewn field data:

Re: [meteorite-list] Strewnfield size

2004-12-02 Thread David Freeman
Dear Bernd; Interesting anomaly...how about being named Paul McCartney ;-) Rock Springs L-6 strewnfield length: 0 ...a strewnfield of one. Very best, Dave F. [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: Paul Mc Cartney ;-) wrote: I'm doing some research and found a interesting anomaly. The strewnfield for

[meteorite-list] Strewnfield size

2004-12-01 Thread McCartney Taylor
I'm doing some research and found a interesting anomoly. The strewnfield for Kendleton is 2 miles. Most strewnfields I've read about are normally 5-15 miles long for stone meteorites. Anyone heard of a 2 mile strewnfield? -=mt __ Meteorite-list