KEY FACTS:
METEOROID: Small bodies that travel through
space. Smaller than asteroids; most smaller than a pebble. Many sources. Most come from asteroids broken apart by impacts with other asteroids.
Others come from the Moon, comets, or Mars.
METEORS: A meteoroid that has entered the Earth's atmosphere, usually making a fiery trail as it falls.
Sometimes called "shooting star" or "falling star".
Just before a meteor enter's the Earth's
atmosphere, it's moving approx.70 kilometers per second. Friction between the meteor and gas in Earth's atmosphere
causes intense heat; the meteor glows with heat and then burns. Most burn up before hitting Earth. Only large meteors survive the trip through atmosphere.
A "fireball" is any meteor that
is brighter than Venus (magnitude -4).
METEOR SHOWER: A phenomenon where many meteors
fall through the atmosphere in relatively short time and in approximately parallel trajectories.
METEORITES: A meteor that has fallen to
Earth. Rare. Survived fall through atmosphere, losing lots of mass. Mmade up of rock and/or metals.
Estimated
1,000 tons to more than 10,000 tons of meteoritic material falls to Earth each day. Most very tiny.
Meteors probably come from our own solar system, rather than interstellar
space.
Composition of meteor provides clues to their origins.
May share a common origin with the asteroids.
Several per hour can usually be seen on any given night.
Some meteor showers occur annually or at rather regular intervals.
Meteor Showers are greater in autumn and winter.
The number of meteor showers increases after midnight and is usually
greatest just before dawn.
Most famous meteor showers are the Perseids which peak around
August 12 every year.
Meteor showers are usually named after a star or constellation which is
close to the radiant (the position from which the meteors appear to come).
Largest individual iron meteorite is Hoba meteorite
from southwest Africa which has a mass of about 54,000 kg.
There are only a few documented cases on record of someone being hurt or
killed by a meteorite.
Most meteoritic samples are either iron (actually nickel-iron alloy);
stony,which are predominately rocky-silicates; or stony-iron.
Sixteen meteorites have been found in Antarctica are
believed to have originated on Mars. Gases trapped in these meteorites match the composition of the martian atmosphere.