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Fire in the Sky: Community Science with a Network of All-Sky Cameras

Fire in the Sky: Community Science with a Network of All-Sky Cameras. Frank Sanders DMNH DES Associate 15 October 2001. OUTLINE. 1) Introduction: Solar System Billiards. 2) Collisions with Earth and Computation of Orbits. 3) How the Community Reacts When Fireballs Occur. 4) Meteor Showers.

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Fire in the Sky: Community Science with a Network of All-Sky Cameras

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  1. Fire in the Sky:Community Science with a Network of All-Sky Cameras Frank Sanders DMNH DES Associate 15 October 2001

  2. OUTLINE 1) Introduction: Solar System Billiards 2) Collisions with Earth and Computation of Orbits 3) How the Community Reacts When Fireballs Occur 4) Meteor Showers 5) What DMNH Historically Does When Fireballs Occur 6) What DMNH Has Not Been Able to do Historically 7) More Recent DMNH Fireball Efforts 8) What the Museum Will Do with the All-Sky Network 9) What Students Can Do with the All-Sky Network 10) Example Case History (off-line, time permitting) Community Science with a Network of All-Sky Cameras: Frank Sanders

  3. Introduction: Solar System Billiards • Overall solar system • Asteroid belt • JUPITER: Solar System’s Heavyweight • How things get thrown toward Earth • Geometry of Earth encounters • How we can determine original orbits Community Science with a Network of All-Sky Cameras: Frank Sanders

  4. Solar System Small Bodies: The Oort Cloud Billions of icy-dusty blocks orbiting our sun at distances approaching halfway to the nearest star. They are left over from the original proto-solar system cloud. They have changed little in 4.6 billion years. Orbits sometimes disturbed by nearby stars: Once disturbed, each body may either gain energy and be ejected from solar orbit or else may lose energy and drop into the inner solar system From Beatty & Chaikin, The New Solar System Cambridge Press 1998

  5. Comets that are injected into the inner solar system are further perturbed by Jupiter... …sometimes into orbits that intersect Earth’s path in space. They, or debris derived from them, may strike Earth under this circumstance. Comet Hale-Bopp by Frank Sanders Community Science with a Network of Sky Cameras - Frank Sanders

  6. Solar System Small Bodies: Comets Some asteroids and smaller meteoroids are probably derived from the cores of “dead” comets…. ….and they sometimes collide with Earth, too. From Beatty & Chaikin, The New Solar System Cambridge Press 1998

  7. Solar System Small Bodies:The Asteroid Belt So material in this region remained in the proto-planetary stage, never accreting into a planet-size mass Gap between Mars and Jupiter; Why no planet here? ? ? ? Gravity effects of the proto-Jupiter probably stopped planetary accretion here…. ?

  8. Solar System Small Bodies:Asteroid Families About 318 Earth masses Asteroids are material that failed to form a planet, mainly due to Jupiter gravity effects Materials have been minimally altered for past 4.6 billion years The Belt occupies critical zone where more volatile stuff appears These are orbital, not mineralogical, families

  9. Solar System Small Bodies: Kirkwood Gaps Resonances (gaps) at: 4:1 7:2 3:1 5:2 7:3 2:1 5:3 Kirkwood Gaps are gravity resonances with Jupiter

  10. Solar System Small Bodies: Belt Collisions Any given body may orbit in the asteroid belt with high stability for millions of years. But over geological periods of time….. Debris are then swept out by Jupiter, sometimes onto Earth-crossing orbits Collisions do occur, and the resulting debris may have new orbits that pass through the Kirkwood Gaps. From Beatty & Chaikin, The New Solar System Community Science with a Network of Sky Cameras--Frank Sanders

  11. Solar System Small Bodies: Earth Crossing Orbits Community Science with a Network of Sky Cameras--Frank Sanders

  12. Solar System Small Bodies: Earth Crossing Orbit Detail Community Science with a Network of Sky Cameras--Frank Sanders

  13. Solar System Small Bodies: Earth Crossing Orbits Usually Don’t Intersect Earth’s Orbit (!) Pictures often make them appear to intersect Earth’s orbit because they are 3-D entities that we usually draw in 2 dimensions From Beatty & Chaikin, The New Solar System Cambridge Press 1998 Community Science with a Network of Sky Cameras--Frank Sanders

  14. Solar System Small Bodies: But When They DO Intersect…. Community Science with a Network of Sky Cameras--Frank Sanders

  15. Solar System Small Bodies: Significance Small bodies are minimally altered since the formation of the solar system. Studying them tells us about the solar system’s origins. We should collect as much of this material as possible for scientific purposes. In contrast to small bodies, the planets have, to a greater or lesser extent, all generated substantial alteration of their component materials, and thus only provide us with limited information about their origins. From Beatty & Chaikin, The New Solar System Cambridge Press 1998 Community Science with a Network of Sky Cameras--Frank Sanders

  16. Solar System Small Bodies: Who Cares? Collecting meteorites gives us a virtually no-cost sample-return mission. But to make the effort most useful, we also need to know where the original body was orbiting…. Community Science with a Network of Sky Cameras--Frank Sanders

  17. Solar System Small Bodies: Up-Close View of an Encounter Community Science with a Network of Sky Cameras--Frank Sanders

  18. Solar System Small Bodies: Encounter Geometry Basics If meteoroid encountered Earth’s gravity but not its atmosphere or surface, it would swing through on a hyperbolic path. Community Science with a Network of Sky Cameras--Frank Sanders

  19. Solar System Small Bodies: Encounter Details Community Science with a Network of Sky Cameras--Frank Sanders

  20. Encounter Details: Tracing an Orbit Backward & Forward IF we can obtain: date, time, descent angle, direction (azimuth) of arrival, and entry speed (scalar of velocity vector) of a meteoroid, then we can compute both…. A probable fall location for meteorite(s) and an original orbit, telling us where the the thing originated in our solar system Community Science with a Network of Sky Cameras--Frank Sanders

  21. Computing Orbits Only a few people in the world have ever computed meteoroid orbits. A.D. Dubyago (1940’s-60’s) of Kazak State University, Peter Brown at Los Alamos National Laboratory, and Zdenek Ceplecha in the Czech Republic are only people I know who have or are doing this. F. Sanders has developed this capability for the Museum, and has checked his results against computations by Peter Brown for three meteors: Tagish Lake, Elbert, and La Garita. Results have agreed to within fractions of a degree. Community Science with a Network of Sky Cameras--Frank Sanders

  22. Computing Orbits: Procedure Basic Procedure: 1) Gather raw data from witnesses and/or cameras 2) Determine descent angle, azimuth of arrival, and sub-point of retardation (this gives the apparent radiant) 3) Compute astronomical variables for that moment in time(solar longitude, longitude of the apex, GST, LST, Julian date, etc.) 4) Compute right ascension(RA) and declination(dec) of the apparent radiant 5)Compute the localzenith angle correctionfor Earth gravity, and also the so-called diurnal aberration correction (small) Community Science with a Network of Sky Cameras--Frank Sanders

  23. Computing Orbits: Procedure continued Basic Procedure, continued: 6)Compute corrected radiant RA and dec, incl. step 4 corrections. 7) Transform corrected radiant to true radiant (heliocentric frame of reference, in ecliptic coordinates) 8) Use heliocentric velocity and ecliptic coordinates of the true radiant, along with earlier computed astronomical variables to obtain orbital elements(eccentricity, inclination to ecliptic, semi-major axis, longitude of the ascending node, longitude of perihelion, etc.) Community Science with a Network of Sky Cameras--Frank Sanders

  24. Computing Orbits: Software . Community Science with a Network of Sky Cameras--Frank Sanders

  25. Computing Orbits: Software 2 . Community Science with a Network of Sky Cameras--Frank Sanders

  26. Computing Orbits: Software 3 . Community Science with a Network of Sky Cameras--Frank Sanders

  27. Computing Orbits: Software 4 . Community Science with a Network of Sky Cameras--Frank Sanders

  28. Summary of the Science So now we see the big picture of what’s going on: 1) Jupiter throws asteroids, meteoroids, comets and cometary cores at us. Sometimes they run into Earth’s atmosphere and then some chunks may survive to reach Earth’s surface. 2) These objects represent minimallyaltered material from the birth of the solar system. We should collect them for study, and also should determine where they came from, if possible. 3) To accomplish either of these two goals, we need to know entry details (numbers!). This is where Community Science sky cameras and eyewitnesses come into the picture. Community Science with a Network of All-Sky Cameras: Frank Sanders

  29. What Happens When a Meteoroid Enters the Atmosphere: Physical Effects Body enters at more than 25,000 mph (40,000 km/hr). Plasma ball forms around it at more than 5000 degrees Kelvin. This is a FIREBALL, more accurately BOLIDE. Object lights up with a brilliance that can illuminate the ground like daylight at distances exceeding 20 miles. Witnesses see the object at distances in excess of 100 miles (and they all think it was a mile away!). Object experiences forces of 100-300 g’s and usually begins to break up at about 15-25 miles altitude. Pieces slow down above 40,000 feet and fall to Earth. Community Science with a Network of Sky Cameras--Frank Sanders

  30. What Happens When a Meteoroid Enters the Atmosphere: Physical Effects, continued Shock waves (both bow shock and explosive) occur. Sound is heard at distances of tens of miles, and U.S. Government nuclear sensors may detect at 100’s of miles. Some witnesses hear sound simultaneous with visual phenomenon. “Electrophonic sound” is not understood. Break-up, usually at about 10-15 miles altitude, is often spectacular. This is retardation. Subsequent to break-up, many small embers may be seen to fall toward surface by nearby witnesses. Pieces that fall to Earth are meteorites. Community Science with a Network of Sky Cameras--Frank Sanders

  31. What Happens When a Meteoroid Enters the Atmosphere: likely Meteorite Falls Small meteoroids burn up completely at high altitudes. Large meteoroids burn (ablate) material, too. But they have enough mass to survive into the lower atmosphere. The large mass plowing into the lower atmosphere at high speed generates the plasma ball, becoming a fireball. Thus,the occurrence of a fireball is a good (but not certain) indication that a meteorite has fallen to Earth. Sadly, most are not recoverable. Tracking fireballs is equivalent to tracking possible meteorite falls. Community Science with a Network of Sky Cameras--Frank Sanders

  32. How the Community Reacts Point of retardation Simulated fireball track in the sky Community Science with a Network of Sky Cameras--Frank Sanders

  33. How the Community Reacts Witnesses are typically flabbergasted. They are anxious to share their experience with someone. They are anxious to know more about what they saw and where it came from. Hundreds or thousands of telephone and E-mail reports flood into the Museum. Painting by a witness to a fireball Community Science with a Network of Sky Cameras--Frank Sanders

  34. How the Community Reacts: Media Mass media (print, radio, television) are anxious to obtain timely and accurate information on what has happened. Interest occurs at both local and national level. Large number of media inquiries typically flood into the Museum. People want timely information and images, if available. Community Science with a Network of Sky Cameras--Frank Sanders

  35. More Community Interest: Meteor Showers The old tails of comets (mainly dust grains) orbit the sun indefinitely. Earth periodically passes through some of these debris clouds. These debris clouds generate meteor showers when Earth passes through each cloud on a yearly basis. Result is predictable meteor showers. Observation of such showers interests the public and can help us verify sky camera performance. Community Science with a Network of Sky Cameras--Frank Sanders

  36. What the Museum has done Historically about Fireballs Community Science with a Network of All-Sky Cameras: Frank Sanders

  37. What the Museum has done When Fireballs have Occurred Led by Jack Murphy (with Andy Caldwell, Al Keimig, etc.):: 1) Obtain telephone reports 2) Follow up telephone reports with on-the-spot eyewitness interviews 3) Reduce eyewitness interviews to probable flight paths, manually 4) Place notes in archival files 5) In exceptional cases, try to localize fall location and conduct some ground search Fireball flash at 20 miles slant range, November 1995 Community Science with a Network of Sky Cameras--Frank Sanders

  38. What the Museum has not been able to do when fireballs have occurred Fast data collection and analysis have not been possible, due to reliance on hit-or-miss of eyewitness reports. Have not been able to respond to media requests for information in less than several weeks, for the same reason. Have not generally been able to provide any imagery of fireballs. Have not been able to obtain any data on entry speed, critical to determination of both fall location and orbit. Community Science with a Network of Sky Cameras--Frank Sanders

  39. What the Museum has developed recently for fireball responses Beginning in 1997, Frank Sanders conceived of a Colorado-wide sky camera system to provide: 1) Quantitative data on speed and location, for computing 3-dimensional flight tracks via overlapping coverage; 2) Raw data for computing orbits and fall locations; 3) Obtaining fireball imagery to satisfy the public and media need for pictures. Goals were to involve Community in collecting data, and to feed information back to the public quickly and accurately. Sanders built a prototype sky camera and demonstrated it in 1997, but support for a program not deemed possible at that time. Community Science with a Network of Sky Cameras--Frank Sanders

  40. What the Museum has developed recently for fireball responses, cont. But recently, the Museum has developed a Community Science program that will use sky cameras deployed across Colorado. (More on that later.) Sandia National Laboratory in Albuquerque coincidentally has been building its own network in New Mexico, and is partnering with the Museum to share data and expertise. Software has been developed to compute 3-dimensional flight tracks from eyewitness and camera data Other software has been developed and tested to compute orbits from camera data. Sanders and Chris Peterson have further developed sky camera designs Community Science with a Network of Sky Cameras--Frank Sanders

  41. What the Museum has developed recently for fireball responses, cont. Gianna Sullivan leads the Community Science Program. She is developing a wide range of capabilities, discussed later. Andy Caldwell and Chris Peterson are part of that team. Meanwhile, much emphasis has also been placed on gathering eyewitness data and analyzing reports quickly, for media feed-back. Electronic reportsare now taken via E-mail in addition to the telephone, which makes for faster and easier filing and analysis of data Substantial emphasis has been placed on responding to media requests for information. Community Science with a Network of Sky Cameras--Frank Sanders

  42. What the Museum will do with a Network of All-Sky Cameras Community Science with a Network of All-Sky Cameras: Frank Sanders

  43. What the Museum will do with a Network of All-Sky Cameras Two Major Components: 1) Continuously monitor Colorado skies for fireballs and meteors; 2) Involve studentsin the project, maintaining sites, acquiring data, and sharing data out to other students and the Museum. Community Science with a Network of Sky Cameras--Frank Sanders

  44. What the Museum will do with a Network of All-Sky Cameras: Overlapping Coverage 1) Cameras are placed on school rooftops at separation distances of, typically, 50-80 miles; 2) Cameras monitor sky 24 hrs/day, with software set up to force recording when meteor events occur; 3) Recorded data are transmitted to the Museum and to students at other schools; 4) Overlapping camera coverage allows us to determine flight tracks, fall locations, and original solar orbits. Community Science with a Network of Sky Cameras--Frank Sanders

  45. Compute Original Orbit What the Museum will do with a Network of All-Sky Cameras: Overlapping Coverage Station 1 Flightline computed Station 2 Point of Retardation Compute fall location Community Science with a Network of Sky Cameras--Frank Sanders

  46. What the Museum will do with a Network of All-Sky Cameras, cont. Even if data are obtained from a single camera, the flightline can be computed by combining camera data and eyewitness reports; BUT the camera data will provide velocity, and thus allow us to compute at least approximate orbital data. In addition to scientific outputs, Museum will be able to RAPIDLY respond to media requests for information. Fast-response approximation of flight path; Fast-response images of fireballs for video media Fast-response indications of fall locations and orbits for media Community Science with a Network of Sky Cameras--Frank Sanders

  47. What the Museum will do with a Network of All-Sky Cameras, cont. And Journal Papers, as well, to share information with the scientific community. Community Science with a Network of Sky Cameras--Frank Sanders

  48. What Students will do with a Network of All-Sky Cameras Community Science with a Network of All-Sky Cameras: Frank Sanders

  49. What Students will do with a Network of All-Sky Cameras Students operate hardware and software to acquire data; Students store data from fireball and meteor events; Students evaluate and analyze data from the events; Students share data with other schools and the Museum; Students are motivated to further study: Related mathematics Related physics Solar system origins and related astronomy Community Science with a Network of Sky Cameras--Frank Sanders

  50. Conclusions Community Science All-Sky Camera Project will provide: 1) Opportunity for Colorado students to participate in a meaningful way in scientific observations, data collection, and data analysis, and data sharing. 2) Critical data for the Museum to use in an ongoing scientific project to study meteors and meteorites; 3) Vastly improved ability to provide timely and accurate data to the public following fireball events. Community Science with a Network of Sky Cameras--Frank Sanders

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