A rare free silica-bearing micrometeorite

Author(s):  
Dafilgo Fernandes

<p>Extraterrestrial dust that reaches the Earth’s surface has shown to represent the diverse types of samples from different precursors, namely, asteroid complexes and cometary bodies from the solar system. A substantial amount of this dust that strikes the upper atmosphere is believed to have been lost due to frictional heating with air molecules. Cosmic spherules that are melted particles are some of the widely recognized micrometeorites that survived this catastrophic entry process; however, their primordial characteristics are altered from their precursors making it difficult to identify the precursors. An individual peculiar spherule MS-I35-P204 recovered from the Antarctica blue ice has been identified. The spherule has been segregated using magnetic separation method, mounted in epoxy, and examined using SEM, subsequently analysed under electron microprobe. It is surrounded by a thin magnetite rim, and also holds a single kamacite bead that protrudes out at its top. The interior mineralogy mostly constitutes of a bulk pyroxene normative glass (MnO>2wt%) with several vesicles. The rare mineral phase is a skeletal aggregate of free silica, bearing Fe nuggets embedded in a glass. An isolated narrow lath of forsterite appears to be chondritic and is observed as relict grain that is associated with an anomalous low Ca pyroxene (MnO ~1.3 wt%, FeO~13 wt%). Earlier, free silica has been reported in some chondritic meteorites particularly the Enstatite and Ordinary group, and also in some carbonaceous chondrites such as CM, CR, CH, and K. It profoundly forms a pod that encloses the ferromagnesian silicate in silica-bearing chondrules. The unusual mineral assemblage seen in this spherule thereby appears to constrain probably the unique type of its contributor which need to be studied.</p>

1977 ◽  
Vol 39 ◽  
pp. 127-132 ◽  
Author(s):  
P. M. Millman

Evidence for the chemical composition of cometary meteoroids is available from the spectra of shower meteors, from the analysis of extra-terrestrial dust particles, from a study of residues in the bottom of microcraters on plates exposed to the interplanetary environment, and from measures of the relative abundances of non-atmospheric ions in the E-region of the earth’s upper atmosphere. Quantitative measures of chemical abundances in meteoroids, based on the four techniques listed, show that in general the cometary meteoroids encountered by the earth conform to the carbonaceous chondrites type 1 in the case of the commonest metallic elements. There is also qualitative evidence of the presence of significant quantities of some of the light volatiles.


2002 ◽  
Vol 12 (10) ◽  
pp. 253-280 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. Lilensten ◽  
M. Kretzschmar
Keyword(s):  

Author(s):  
Petro Nevodovskyi ◽  
Anatoliy Vid'machenko ◽  
Orest Ivakhiv ◽  
Olexsandr Zbrutskyi ◽  
Mykhaylo Geraimchuk ◽  
...  
Keyword(s):  

1975 ◽  
Vol 65 (3) ◽  
pp. 637-650
Author(s):  
E. J. Douze ◽  
G. G. Sorrells

abstract The performance of long-period seismographs is often seriously degraded by atmospheric pressure variation; the problem is particularly severe at periods greater than 20 sec. The pressure variations associated with wind-generated turbulence and acoustic waves are sufficient to deform the surface of the Earth, thus adding to the background noise level recorded by the seismometer. If microbarographs are operated together with the seismograph system, a large percentage of the atmospherically generated noise can be eliminated by the use of optimum filters. The filters are designed based on the least-mean-squares criterion, with the seismograph time trace as the desired output and the microbarographs as the inputs. Single-channel filters, using only one microbarograph, located at the seismometer vault are used to attenuate wind-generated noise. In order to attenuate the noise on windless days from other pressure sources, multichannel filtering is usually necessary and therefore an array of microbarographs is required. The filters used to predict the wind-generated noise are shown to be stable despite the complicated source. The performance of the multichannel varies widely depending on the structure of pressure variations predominating in the atmosphere.


1960 ◽  
Vol 10 ◽  
pp. 716-717 ◽  
Author(s):  
V. I. Krassovsky

The instruments with which we have obtained our results are displayed at the Industrial Exhibition (in Moscow), and therefore I shall not describe them here. I shall state briefly the results of those investigations in the upper atmosphere which are related to the interplanetary medium and are therefore of interest to astronomers.We made an attempt to measure corpuscular fluxes by means of the third sputnik. For this purpose we used as indicators two fluorescent screens made of ZnS (Ag) (2 x i o - 3 g cm-2), covered with aluminium foil of different thicknesses (8 x i o - 4 g cm-2 and 4 x io~4 g cm-2). There were three aluminium diaphragms 5 mm thick in front of screens 5 cm in diameter. Each diaphragm had a window for capturing all corpuscles with a solid angle of 1/4 steradian. The emission of the fluorescent screens was detected by photo-multipliers. The electrical signals so produced were transmitted to a storage device and then to the Earth by a radio-telemetering system.


2019 ◽  
Vol 30 ◽  
pp. 05012
Author(s):  
Alexander Generalov ◽  
Elchin Gadzhiev ◽  
Pavel Shmachilin ◽  
Yuri Polushkovskiy ◽  
Vladimir Skripachev ◽  
...  

The ionosphere is the ionized part of Earth's upper atmosphere, from about 60 km to 1,000 km altitude, a region that includes the thermosphere and parts of the mesosphere and exosphere. The ionosphere is ionized by solar radiation. It plays an important role in atmospheric electricity and forms the inner edge of the magnetosphere. It has practical importance because, among other functions, it influences radio propagation to distant places on the Earth. The region below the ionosphere is called neutral atmosphere, or neutrosphere. In this paper aspects of design antennas for radio occultation method of ionosphere diagnostics are presented.


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