The Analysis of Two Unique Micrometeorite Collections, and the Effect of Atmospheric Entry on Extra-Terrestrial Particles

Each year 40,000 tons of extra-terrestrial material reaches the Earth's surface as micrometeorites. These small (sub 1 mm) grains of material supply the majority of the extra-terrestrial flux reaching Earth. Unfortunately due to their small size they are often completely altered by their atmosp...

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Main Author: Alesbrook, Luke Stephen
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:https://kar.kent.ac.uk/84235/
https://kar.kent.ac.uk/84235/1/35thesis_uploaded_-_Copy_compressed_1_.pdf
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spelling ftkentuniv:oai:kar.kent.ac.uk:84235 2023-05-15T13:48:57+02:00 The Analysis of Two Unique Micrometeorite Collections, and the Effect of Atmospheric Entry on Extra-Terrestrial Particles Alesbrook, Luke Stephen 2019-12 application/pdf https://kar.kent.ac.uk/84235/ https://kar.kent.ac.uk/84235/1/35thesis_uploaded_-_Copy_compressed_1_.pdf en eng https://kar.kent.ac.uk/84235/1/35thesis_uploaded_-_Copy_compressed_1_.pdf Alesbrook, Luke Stephen (2019) The Analysis of Two Unique Micrometeorite Collections, and the Effect of Atmospheric Entry on Extra-Terrestrial Particles. Doctor of Philosophy (PhD) thesis, University of Kent. (KAR id:84235 </84235>) cc_by_nc QB Astronomy Thesis NonPeerReviewed 2019 ftkentuniv 2023-03-12T19:18:15Z Each year 40,000 tons of extra-terrestrial material reaches the Earth's surface as micrometeorites. These small (sub 1 mm) grains of material supply the majority of the extra-terrestrial flux reaching Earth. Unfortunately due to their small size they are often completely altered by their atmospheric passage and hence no-longer accurately reflect the mineralogy of their precursor grain. Despite the trauma of atmospheric entry, some dust grains remain intact through entry as a result of their trajectory and these may provide pristine samples of early solar system material, or material from a larger extra-terrestrial body. As such, micrometeorites provide an important vector for the analysis of the solar system's evolution and planetary science. This thesis examines the results of two novel micrometeorite collections, and the effects that atmospheric entry has on incoming micrometeorites. The two examined collections took place on the Kwajalein atoll in the mid-pacific and from the Halley VI research station in the Antarctic. Results recovered from these collections showed limited numbers of extra-terrestrial particles were recovered for further analysis from the Kwajalein survey, with none found on the Antarctic filters. Work was carried out to aid in the separation of extra-terrestrial material from the terrestrial debris often encountered in micrometeorite collections. Results from this work demonstrated the feasibility of, not only separating out material, but also provides possible links to micrometeorites and other meteoritic samples. This thesis also discusses the eight new extra-terrestrial candidates found upon the Kwajalein filters. The effects of atmospheric entry was investigated using specially designed equipment to allow passage through air for Light Gas Gun projectiles. Olivine projectile passage, through atmosphere, at hyper-velocity speeds was successfully carried out with the projectiles being recovered intact at speeds up to 2kms\(^{-1}\). At speeds exceeding 2kms\(^{-1}\), the force at launch ... Thesis Antarc* Antarctic University of Kent: KAR - Kent Academic Repository Antarctic Pacific The Antarctic
institution Open Polar
collection University of Kent: KAR - Kent Academic Repository
op_collection_id ftkentuniv
language English
topic QB Astronomy
spellingShingle QB Astronomy
Alesbrook, Luke Stephen
The Analysis of Two Unique Micrometeorite Collections, and the Effect of Atmospheric Entry on Extra-Terrestrial Particles
topic_facet QB Astronomy
description Each year 40,000 tons of extra-terrestrial material reaches the Earth's surface as micrometeorites. These small (sub 1 mm) grains of material supply the majority of the extra-terrestrial flux reaching Earth. Unfortunately due to their small size they are often completely altered by their atmospheric passage and hence no-longer accurately reflect the mineralogy of their precursor grain. Despite the trauma of atmospheric entry, some dust grains remain intact through entry as a result of their trajectory and these may provide pristine samples of early solar system material, or material from a larger extra-terrestrial body. As such, micrometeorites provide an important vector for the analysis of the solar system's evolution and planetary science. This thesis examines the results of two novel micrometeorite collections, and the effects that atmospheric entry has on incoming micrometeorites. The two examined collections took place on the Kwajalein atoll in the mid-pacific and from the Halley VI research station in the Antarctic. Results recovered from these collections showed limited numbers of extra-terrestrial particles were recovered for further analysis from the Kwajalein survey, with none found on the Antarctic filters. Work was carried out to aid in the separation of extra-terrestrial material from the terrestrial debris often encountered in micrometeorite collections. Results from this work demonstrated the feasibility of, not only separating out material, but also provides possible links to micrometeorites and other meteoritic samples. This thesis also discusses the eight new extra-terrestrial candidates found upon the Kwajalein filters. The effects of atmospheric entry was investigated using specially designed equipment to allow passage through air for Light Gas Gun projectiles. Olivine projectile passage, through atmosphere, at hyper-velocity speeds was successfully carried out with the projectiles being recovered intact at speeds up to 2kms\(^{-1}\). At speeds exceeding 2kms\(^{-1}\), the force at launch ...
format Thesis
author Alesbrook, Luke Stephen
author_facet Alesbrook, Luke Stephen
author_sort Alesbrook, Luke Stephen
title The Analysis of Two Unique Micrometeorite Collections, and the Effect of Atmospheric Entry on Extra-Terrestrial Particles
title_short The Analysis of Two Unique Micrometeorite Collections, and the Effect of Atmospheric Entry on Extra-Terrestrial Particles
title_full The Analysis of Two Unique Micrometeorite Collections, and the Effect of Atmospheric Entry on Extra-Terrestrial Particles
title_fullStr The Analysis of Two Unique Micrometeorite Collections, and the Effect of Atmospheric Entry on Extra-Terrestrial Particles
title_full_unstemmed The Analysis of Two Unique Micrometeorite Collections, and the Effect of Atmospheric Entry on Extra-Terrestrial Particles
title_sort analysis of two unique micrometeorite collections, and the effect of atmospheric entry on extra-terrestrial particles
publishDate 2019
url https://kar.kent.ac.uk/84235/
https://kar.kent.ac.uk/84235/1/35thesis_uploaded_-_Copy_compressed_1_.pdf
geographic Antarctic
Pacific
The Antarctic
geographic_facet Antarctic
Pacific
The Antarctic
genre Antarc*
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genre_facet Antarc*
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op_relation https://kar.kent.ac.uk/84235/1/35thesis_uploaded_-_Copy_compressed_1_.pdf
Alesbrook, Luke Stephen (2019) The Analysis of Two Unique Micrometeorite Collections, and the Effect of Atmospheric Entry on Extra-Terrestrial Particles. Doctor of Philosophy (PhD) thesis, University of Kent. (KAR id:84235 </84235>)
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