An ET Origin for Stratospheric Particles Collected during the 1998 Leonids Meteor Shower

On 17 November 1998, a helium-filled weather balloon was launched into the stratosphere, equipped with a xerogel microparticle collector. The three-hour flight was designed to sample the dust environment in the stratosphere during the Leonid meteor shower, and possibly to capture Leonid meteoroids....

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Main Authors: Noever, D A, Phillips, J A, Horack, J M, Jerman, G, Myszka, E
Language:English
Published: 1999
Subjects:
Online Access:http://cds.cern.ch/record/404556
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spelling ftcern:oai:cds.cern.ch:404556 2023-05-15T13:31:42+02:00 An ET Origin for Stratospheric Particles Collected during the 1998 Leonids Meteor Shower Noever, D A Phillips, J A Horack, J M Jerman, G Myszka, E 1999-10-22 http://cds.cern.ch/record/404556 eng eng http://cds.cern.ch/record/404556 astro-ph/9910391 oai:cds.cern.ch:404556 Astrophysics and Astronomy 1999 ftcern 2018-07-28T04:14:18Z On 17 November 1998, a helium-filled weather balloon was launched into the stratosphere, equipped with a xerogel microparticle collector. The three-hour flight was designed to sample the dust environment in the stratosphere during the Leonid meteor shower, and possibly to capture Leonid meteoroids. Environmental Scanning Electron Microscope analyses of the returned collectors revealed the capture of a $\sim$30-$\mu$m particle, with a smooth, multigranular shape, and partially melted, translucent rims; similar to known Antarctic micrometeorites. Energy-dispersive X-ray Mass Spectroscopy shows enriched concentrations of the non-volatile elements, Mg, Al, and Fe. The particle possesses a high magnesium to iron ratio of 2.96, similar to that observed in 1998 Leonids meteors (Borovicka, {\it et al.} 1999) and sharply higher than the ratio expected for typical material from the earth's crust. A statistical nearest-neighbor analysis of the abundance ratios Mg/Si, Al/Si, and Fe/Si demonstrates that the particle is most similar in composition to cosmic spherules captured during airplane flights through the stratosphere. The mineralogical class is consistent with a stony (S) type of silicates, olivine [(Mg,Fe)$_{2}$SiO$_{4}$] and pyroxene [(Mg,Fe)SiO$_{3}$]--or oxides, herecynite [(Fe, Mg) Al$_{2}$O$_{4}$]. Attribution to the debris stream of the Leonids' parent body, comet Tempel-Tuttle, would make it the first such material from beyond the orbit of Uranus positively identified on Earth. Other/Unknown Material Antarc* Antarctic CERN Document Server (CDS) Antarctic
institution Open Polar
collection CERN Document Server (CDS)
op_collection_id ftcern
language English
topic Astrophysics and Astronomy
spellingShingle Astrophysics and Astronomy
Noever, D A
Phillips, J A
Horack, J M
Jerman, G
Myszka, E
An ET Origin for Stratospheric Particles Collected during the 1998 Leonids Meteor Shower
topic_facet Astrophysics and Astronomy
description On 17 November 1998, a helium-filled weather balloon was launched into the stratosphere, equipped with a xerogel microparticle collector. The three-hour flight was designed to sample the dust environment in the stratosphere during the Leonid meteor shower, and possibly to capture Leonid meteoroids. Environmental Scanning Electron Microscope analyses of the returned collectors revealed the capture of a $\sim$30-$\mu$m particle, with a smooth, multigranular shape, and partially melted, translucent rims; similar to known Antarctic micrometeorites. Energy-dispersive X-ray Mass Spectroscopy shows enriched concentrations of the non-volatile elements, Mg, Al, and Fe. The particle possesses a high magnesium to iron ratio of 2.96, similar to that observed in 1998 Leonids meteors (Borovicka, {\it et al.} 1999) and sharply higher than the ratio expected for typical material from the earth's crust. A statistical nearest-neighbor analysis of the abundance ratios Mg/Si, Al/Si, and Fe/Si demonstrates that the particle is most similar in composition to cosmic spherules captured during airplane flights through the stratosphere. The mineralogical class is consistent with a stony (S) type of silicates, olivine [(Mg,Fe)$_{2}$SiO$_{4}$] and pyroxene [(Mg,Fe)SiO$_{3}$]--or oxides, herecynite [(Fe, Mg) Al$_{2}$O$_{4}$]. Attribution to the debris stream of the Leonids' parent body, comet Tempel-Tuttle, would make it the first such material from beyond the orbit of Uranus positively identified on Earth.
author Noever, D A
Phillips, J A
Horack, J M
Jerman, G
Myszka, E
author_facet Noever, D A
Phillips, J A
Horack, J M
Jerman, G
Myszka, E
author_sort Noever, D A
title An ET Origin for Stratospheric Particles Collected during the 1998 Leonids Meteor Shower
title_short An ET Origin for Stratospheric Particles Collected during the 1998 Leonids Meteor Shower
title_full An ET Origin for Stratospheric Particles Collected during the 1998 Leonids Meteor Shower
title_fullStr An ET Origin for Stratospheric Particles Collected during the 1998 Leonids Meteor Shower
title_full_unstemmed An ET Origin for Stratospheric Particles Collected during the 1998 Leonids Meteor Shower
title_sort et origin for stratospheric particles collected during the 1998 leonids meteor shower
publishDate 1999
url http://cds.cern.ch/record/404556
geographic Antarctic
geographic_facet Antarctic
genre Antarc*
Antarctic
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctic
op_relation http://cds.cern.ch/record/404556
astro-ph/9910391
oai:cds.cern.ch:404556
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