Amateur astronomers open potential lab in outer space for scientists
September 11th, 2010 - 2:14 pm ICT by ANIWashington, Sep 11 (ANI): Two amateur astronomers, who independently observed and videotaped an asteroid striking the giant planet Jupiter on June 3, have opened a potential giant research lab in space for planetary scientists.
According to a study by professional astronomers, the asteroid was eight to 13 meters in diameter and packed a punch equivalent to a 250- to 1,000-kiloton nuclear bomb - smaller than the violent airburst that decimated trees for 40 kilometers around Tunguska in central Siberia 100 years ago, but similar in its effects.
The initial observations, if supplemented by future observations of asteroid impacts on Jupiter by other amateur astronomers, could help scientists understand the behaviour of meteoroids of various dimensions and composition entering an atmosphere at varying angles and speeds, said Sandia National Laboratories researcher Mark Boslough, one of the paper’s authors
“These amateur observations are very important. To me, the primary significance is the demonstration that relatively small bolides on Jupiter can directly be observed from Earth, that their energy can be quantified and that such impacts are frequent enough to observe,” said Boslough.
A continuous amateur observation campaign could provide data to determine the impact intensity and size of asteroids in the vicinity of Jupiter.
“This would be a major scientific achievement because the physics is the same as when something enters Earth’s atmosphere. More data on airbursts build up our understanding based on empirical observations. And we’re looking down on Jupiter, which gives us a perfect observational platform,” said Boslough.
The Shoemaker-Levy comet impact observed on Jupiter in the 1990s, modelled with startling accuracy at Sandia by Boslough with Sandia researcher David Crawford, revolutionized the way researchers treat air bursts on earth.
“That modelling directly translated into understanding the Tunguska explosion of the early 20th century and the mystery of Libyan desert glass,” said Boslough.
The Libyan desert glass phenomenon involved the discovery of large deposits of shattered glass in the Egyptian desert, where there should be none.
“It seems to me that Jupiter - a big target with tremendous gravitational attraction - should be getting hit by things this size all the time. But apparently nobody is usually watching at the right time. Here, two people were watching at the right time. The amateurs are so reliable and sensitive these days that we’re seeing more impacts,” said Boslough.
The study will be published online in Astrophysical Journal Letters. (ANI)
- Amateur astronomers observe asteroids as they impact Jupiter - Sep 10, 2010
- It's official: Jupiter was hit by an asteroid in 2009, not a comet - Jan 29, 2011
- Jupiter under 'asteroid' attack for 3rd time in 13 months - Aug 24, 2010
- Asteriod caused giant hole on Jupiter - Jan 31, 2011
- Jupiter Struck By Meteor - Jun 07, 2010
- Object slams Jupiter creating pacific-sized bruise - Jul 22, 2009
- Jupiter made comet its temporary moon for 12 years in mid-20th century - Sep 14, 2009
- Asteroid hit will be catastrophic for India, US, China - Jun 30, 2011
- Past comet collisions 'left ripples in Jupiter and Saturn rings' - Apr 01, 2011
- Jupiter possibly hit by object, NASA says - Jul 22, 2009
- US army decides to cover up fireballs from space - Jun 12, 2009
- Asteroids hit earth more frequently than thought - Apr 26, 2012
- Hubble captures new dark "scar" on Jupiter - Jul 25, 2009
- New dark "scar" indicates an object has bombarded Jupiter - Jul 21, 2009
- NASA's Swift satellite, Hubble Telescope probe asteroid collision debris - Apr 29, 2011
Tags: airburst, amateur astronomers, amateur observations, asteroid impacts, bolides, central siberia, comet impact, david crawford, empirical observations, giant planet jupiter, initial observations, meteoroids, nuclear bomb, observation campaign, planetary scientists, sandia national laboratories, sandia researcher, shoemaker levy comet, startling accuracy, tunguska