Block Lot Property Location Class Owner Name Land Impr Total

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Block Lot Property Location Class Owner Name Land Impr Total Municipal Building Block Lot Property Location Class Owner Name Land Impr Total Assessment 40 3 13 BROOKWOOD RD 2 13 BROOKWOOD ROAD STANHOPE, LLC 93000 108400 201400 $108.55 226 15.01 80 RT 206 4A 2016 LACKAWANNA BYRAM, LLC 224000 546000 770000 $415.03 42 113 8 RT 206 4A 206 ACORN DEVELOPMENT CORP 350000 1695200 2045200 $1,102.36 42 115 RT 206 1 206 ACORN DEVELOPMENT CORP 250900 250900 $135.24 42 231 WOODS EDGE RD 1 206 ACORN DEVELOPMENT CORP 500 500 $0.27 216 2.02 272 RT 206 1 206 CONDOMINIUM ASSOC, INC $0.00 41 90.02 22 RT 206 4A 22 ROUTE 206, LLC 246000 100000 346000 $186.49 219 10 242 RT 206 4A 242 RT 206 NORTH LLC 172000 51100 223100 $120.25 225 15.01 276 RT 206 4A 276 ROUTE 206, LLC 186300 303700 490000 $264.11 162 44 39 METEOR TR 2 39 METEOR TRAIL, LLC 152000 52900 204900 $110.44 308 1823 44 BIRCH PKWY 2 44 BIRCH PARKWAY, LLC 302400 53200 355600 $191.67 226 21 55 LACKAWANNA DR 4A 55 LACKAWANA DEVELOPMENT, LLC 180500 419500 600000 $323.40 297 11 5 HEMLOCK TERR 2 5HT, LLC C/O S YUSEM 506300 143700 650000 $350.35 295 9 6 MARINE TERR 2 6 MARINE TERRACE, LLC 103500 114800 218300 $117.66 111 1 101 NORTH SHORE RD 2 ABATO, EDWARD JR 59400 76500 135900 $73.25 231 14 12 LAKE DR W 2 ABBATE, COREY & LORI 95300 168800 264100 $142.35 308 1833.02 66 BIRCH PKWY 2 ABDELGAWAD, TAMER & MOHAMED, NAGLAA 390800 59200 450000 $242.55 29 201.02 23 RT 206 4A ABLESON INDUSTRIES OF NJ, LLC 41200 150900 192100 $103.54 29 201.02 23 RT 206 4A ABLESON INDUSTRIES OF NJ, LLC 41200 150900 192100 $103.54 29 201.02 23 RT 206 4A ABLESON INDUSTRIES OF NJ, LLC 40500 141600 182100 $98.15 29 201.02 23 RT 206 4A ABLESON INDUSTRIES OF NJ, LLC 40500 141600 182100 $98.15 29 201.02 23 RT 206 4A ABLESON INDUSTRIES OF NJ, LLC 40500 141600 182100 $98.15 29 201.02 23 RT 206 4A ABLESON INDUSTRIES OF NJ, LLC 40500 141600 182100 $98.15 365.02 6 12 BRIAR LN 2 ABLESON, WF & NICOLE M 80700 239800 320500 $172.75 275 749 169 FOREST LAKE DR 2 ABOULHOSN, SUHEIL F & CHRISTINE A 97500 150100 247600 $133.46 305 2276 167 GLENSIDE TR 2 ABRAM, BRIAN & BEELITZ, AMANDA 127000 127100 254100 $136.96 400 148 30 SLEEPY HOLLOW RD 2 ABRAMO, PAUL L 126500 158500 285000 $153.62 336 3.10 8 CAMELOT DR 3B ACCETURO, ROBYN 900 900 $0.49 403 67 51 SLEEPY HOLLOW RD 2 ACEVEDO, LUIS & COOK, LESLIE 99600 138900 238500 $128.55 44 194 10 WILDWOOD RD 2 ACKLEY, GARY R JR & RICHMOND,AUTUMN 93000 121300 214300 $115.51 38 62 11 NEWTON AVE 2 ACOSTA, DAVID E 124500 120800 245300 $132.22 104.01 19 20 CRANBERRY LEDGE RD 2 ADAIR, RYAN & HOEKSTRA, ALYSSA 105100 112200 217300 $117.12 337 61 103 STONEHEDGE LN 2 ADAMS, DANIEL & REBECCA 108100 222300 330400 $178.09 53 174.02 50 BROOKWOOD DR 2 ADAMSON, DOUGLAS W & LINDA D 111000 99000 210000 $113.19 40 20 7 BROOKWOOD RD 2 ADLER, JACLYN 99000 115900 214900 $115.83 250 104 119 LAKE DR 2 AGENS, HARRY C 155400 32800 188200 $101.44 344 33.01 275 LACKAWANNA DR 2 AGENS, MICHAEL & MARY 134900 215700 350600 $188.97 224 2 6 TAMARACK RD 2 AGNOR, ARTHUR J & DICARLO, ANGELA 78600 109700 188300 $101.49 337 1.02 66 LEE HILL RD 2 AGUDELO, JUAN & STEPHANIE 81200 205600 286800 $154.59 383 2.14 SOUTH SHORE RD 2 AGUGLIARO, JOHN & PATRICIA 41900 41900 $22.58 337.08 38.51 6 FIELDSTONE TR 2 AHMED, IMRAN & TASDIQ 117400 247200 364600 $196.52 40 15 34 RT 206 2 AKERMAN, MATTHEW & MELISSA 83700 158300 242000 $130.44 29 215.01 41 WATERLOO RD 2 ALBANESE, MATTHEW W & SHIRLEY J 89600 139100 228700 $123.27 204 2 114 SOUTH SHORE RD 2 ALBRECHT, CHARLES & ROSEMARY EST OF 180000 63500 243500 $131.25 188 5 60 SOUTH SHORE RD 2 ALBRECHT, GEORGE F & MAREL D 160600 137400 298000 $160.62 170 23 20 ROSE TR 2 ALBRECHT, WILLIAM & DOLORES 54700 55900 110600 $59.61 337.12 10 32 MANOR DR 2 ALDERSON, MATTHEW R & ANDREA G 121500 340200 461700 $248.86 302 2329 18 RANGER TR 2 ALESSIO, FRANK 121300 142000 263300 $141.92 365.01 8 47 BROOKWOOD RD 2 ALLEN, JEFFREY R & CASSIERE-ALLEN,A 107600 149600 257200 $138.63 249 56 67 LAKE DR 2 ALLEN, KENNETH, JOYCE ET AL 172200 44100 216300 $116.59 287 92 6 WINDING WAY 2 ALLEN, SCOTT J & JULIETTE 95600 143500 239100 $128.87 179 6 16 ROSE TR 2 ALLEN, THOMAS 57300 70700 128000 $68.99 360 61 5 MANU TR 2 ALLISON, PATRICK J & DEBORAH 120500 150600 271100 $146.12 36 43 6 WATERLOO RD 2 ALONSO, LUIS 80600 101100 181700 $97.94 121 29 123 NORTH SHORE RD 2 ALPHA BEAR, LLC 165300 186600 351900 $189.67 29 201.04 21 RT 206 UNIT 3 4A ALTAMIRANO, JULIO & BARBARA 32400 61600 94000 $50.67 80 182 9 BIRCH TR 2 ALTERMAN, MICHAEL R 61200 54700 115900 $62.47 220 25 10 JOHNSON BLVD 2 ALVAREZ, DELORES 97000 62000 159000 $85.70 336 23 367 AMITY RD 2 ALVAREZ, WAYNE 94400 6000 100400 $54.12 307 1873 43 BIRCH PKWY 2 ALWELL, TODD 165300 91800 257100 $138.58 303 2211 190 GLENSIDE TR 2 AMARI, VINCENT F & LAURA 127800 140900 268700 $144.83 197 24 12 SAUGTAUG TR 2 AMATO, JACK C 76800 47400 124200 $66.94 200 46 12 SAUGTAUG TR 1 AMATO, JACK C 26200 26200 $14.12 4 894 34 RIVER RD 2 AMATO, JOSEPH M & NORA J 120000 225500 345500 $186.22 337.04 10.08 58 FIELDSTONE TR 2 AMBERG, TONI E 109600 204300 313900 $169.19 307 1875 39 BIRCH PKWY 2 AMER, ADAM M 149900 141400 291300 $157.01 336 3.13 9 CAMELOT DR 2 AMOROSO, EDWARD & EMILIE 167100 643700 810800 $437.02 155 246.02 12 CABIN SPRING TR 2 ANDERSON FAMILY TST 59700 69900 129600 $69.85 342.02 33 8 MT VIEW TERR 2 ANDERSON, BRIAN H & BONNIE R 95600 131300 226900 $122.30 209 23.02 130 SOUTH SHORE RD 2 ANDERSON, BRYAN 165000 70100 235100 $126.72 328 2 138 NORTH SHORE RD 2 ANDERSON, BRYAN & TRICIA 207800 165500 373300 $201.21 337.01 108 379 AMITY RD 2 ANDERSON, JEFFREY 90500 300100 390600 $210.53 6 489 37 BELTON ST 2 ANDERSON, RALPH & FRANCES C 102000 175700 277700 $149.68 19 476 4 ACORN ST 2 ANDERSON, WILLIAM J & LINDA E 102000 125800 227800 $122.78 255 222 239 LAKE DR 2 ANDOLENA, GARY & HELENE 160000 111200 271200 $146.18 365 13.02 56 LACKAWANNA DR 2 ANDROSKY, ROBERT R & PATRICIA A 115800 152300 268100 $144.51 149 184 2 WO-TA-GA PASS 2 ANGELICA, SCOTT & PATRICIA 69400 103100 172500 $92.98 178 18 12 LAUREL TR 2 ANGELICA, VINCENT P, JANET & SCOTT 62100 48700 110800 $59.72 308 1848 94 BIRCH PKWY 2 ANGELINE, DOMINIQUE C 402800 97200 500000 $269.50 276 513 137 FOREST LAKE DR 2 ANGLUM, ROBERT E & GERALDINE B 96700 154600 251300 $135.45 337.04 8.01 8 STONEHEDGE LN 4A ANICHINI, SYLVAIN 274500 376000 650500 $350.62 255 207 223 LAKE DR 2 ANKIEL, CONRAD J & JANET M 172000 85100 257100 $138.58 360 11.06 10 JANS WAY 2 ANNUIK, P PENNY 191700 71700 263400 $141.97 365.05 6 17 ROSS RD 2 ANSALDI, ANTHONY & THERESA A 109700 193400 303100 $163.37 336 24 363 AMITY RD 2 ANTONIK, BRIAN J & KELLY A 93700 153300 247000 $133.13 275 908 21 GLEN COVE RD 2 ANTONUCCI, STEVEN & TAMMY 100700 145100 245800 $132.49 27 381.02 13 RT 206 4A APEP, INC 215000 485000 700000 $377.30 279 302 38 CRESCENT DR NO 2 APGAR, JOHN P & DONA M 99400 126200 225600 $121.60 226 18 41 LACKAWANNA DR 2 APJ ASSOCIATES, LLC 153400 44600 198000 $106.72 11 212 66 ASH ST 2 APOLINARO, DAVID & LYNN 91800 102300 194100 $104.62 323 51.01 1 STRAWBERRY PT DR 2 APONTE, LUIS A & CHINDARAT 61200 72100 133300 $71.85 279 324.01 32 CRESCENT DR SO 2 APPELGREN, GUIDO & MELISSA 84600 122500 207100 $111.63 320 4 34 STRAWBERRY PT DR 2 APPLEGATE, PATRICIA 166000 128600 294600 $158.79 250 108 123 LAKE DR 2 APPLEYARD, ALETHEA G 153300 45400 198700 $107.10 192 34 1 MAUGTAUG TR 2 APPOLLINA, THERESA 80300 108800 189100 $101.92 236 249.02 1 LAKE DR W 2 AR HOLDINGS, LLC 110600 32900 143500 $77.35 337.10 25.24 45 LYNN DR 2 ARANCIBIA, EDUARDO & ANA 88800 149200 238000 $128.28 87 243 74 CRANBERRY LEDGE RD 2 ARAPKILES, DAMON G & KIMBERLY D 107100 171800 278900 $150.33 343 10.06 1 ANDERSON LN 2 ARBENOIZ, RODRIGO 104300 301300 405600 $218.62 336 3.12 12 CAMELOT DR 2 ARBORE, ANTHONY M & HEATHER M 183800 418600 602400 $324.69 22 231.02 14 RIVER RD 2 ARBORE, MICHAEL F 101000 187900 288900 $155.72 34 3 4 BELL CT 2 ARCH, STEVEN & PAULINA 53000 143400 196400 $105.86 342.01 6 15 MT HEIGHTS DR 2 ARCIENEGA, LISBETH & DUVAL, EDGAR 91000 138600 229600 $123.75 157 268 57 NORTH SHORE RD 2 ARENAS, BRYAN & ROSE M 87200 89000 176200 $94.97 332 3.15 19 DENNIS HILL RD 2 ARMSTRONG, ANDREW C 79000 30600 109600 $59.07 58 70 57 BROOKWOOD DR 2 ARMSTRONG, SHAWN & SUZANNE 99600 164200 263800 $142.19 286 121 14 HEMLOCK RD 2 ARNOLD, PETER & BERYL 99100 116500 215600 $116.21 337.01 51 66 LYNN DR 2 ARRIOLA, DIEGO & KELLY 88800 199800 288600 $155.56 138 44 2 LAKEVIEW TR 2 ARTESE, SHADD V 58300 104500 162800 $87.75 273 305.01 130 LACKAWANNA DR 2 ASH, JOHN & TERESA 120700 264500 385200 $207.62 281 459 6 SHERWOOD FOREST DR 2 ASHLEY, MICHAEL & MARALINE 102300 142200 244500 $131.79 242 26.08 25 LAKE DR 2 AUCHTER, JARED & LAUREN 139000 176200 315200 $169.89 241 502 9 CARPENTER RD 1 AUKLAND PASTURES, LLC/NRLL EAST, LL 38000 38000 $20.48 27 374.01 11 CHESTNUT ST 2 AUST, KURT & KIRSTEN 99900 141400 241300 $130.06 284 213.04 44 WINDING WAY 2 AYRES, STUART A & PHILLIS A 98000 122700 220700 $118.96 53 116 21 BROOKWOOD RD 2 AZAGRA, MARY V 100000 81700 181700 $97.94 251 131 146 LAKE DR 2 AZERI, ZILVEN & NUR 91000 102600 193600 $104.35 403 58 59 SLEEPY HOLLOW RD 2 AZIMOV, DMITRIY 103400 161900 265300 $143.00 5 727 6 BELTON ST 2 AZZARELLI, ELIZABETH 102000 223100 325100 $175.23 360 6.02 7 JANS WAY 2 BAATZ, JOSEPH & PATRICIA 97700 144300 242000 $130.44 337.10 25.10 19 LYNN DR 2 BACCAN FAMILY TST 88800 205900 294700 $158.84 20 280 40 ACORN ST 2 BACHMANN, KENNETH & DEBORAH 107700 139400 247100 $133.19 261 265 212 LACKAWANNA DR 2 BACKLE, CARYN & ELLEN RUSSELL 164200 68700 232900 $125.53 255 184 201 LAKE DR 2 BAEZ, DAVEN A 169000 85800 254800 $137.34 255 182 199 LAKE DR 2 BAEZ, WILFREDO & ANA L 147000 89400 236400 $127.42
Recommended publications
  • Archons (Commanders) [NOTICE: They Are NOT Anlien Parasites], and Then, in a Mirror Image of the Great Emanations of the Pleroma, Hundreds of Lesser Angels
    A R C H O N S HIDDEN RULERS THROUGH THE AGES A R C H O N S HIDDEN RULERS THROUGH THE AGES WATCH THIS IMPORTANT VIDEO UFOs, Aliens, and the Question of Contact MUST-SEE THE OCCULT REASON FOR PSYCHOPATHY Organic Portals: Aliens and Psychopaths KNOWLEDGE THROUGH GNOSIS Boris Mouravieff - GNOSIS IN THE BEGINNING ...1 The Gnostic core belief was a strong dualism: that the world of matter was deadening and inferior to a remote nonphysical home, to which an interior divine spark in most humans aspired to return after death. This led them to an absorption with the Jewish creation myths in Genesis, which they obsessively reinterpreted to formulate allegorical explanations of how humans ended up trapped in the world of matter. The basic Gnostic story, which varied in details from teacher to teacher, was this: In the beginning there was an unknowable, immaterial, and invisible God, sometimes called the Father of All and sometimes by other names. “He” was neither male nor female, and was composed of an implicitly finite amount of a living nonphysical substance. Surrounding this God was a great empty region called the Pleroma (the fullness). Beyond the Pleroma lay empty space. The God acted to fill the Pleroma through a series of emanations, a squeezing off of small portions of his/its nonphysical energetic divine material. In most accounts there are thirty emanations in fifteen complementary pairs, each getting slightly less of the divine material and therefore being slightly weaker. The emanations are called Aeons (eternities) and are mostly named personifications in Greek of abstract ideas.
    [Show full text]
  • Crater Geometry and Ejecta Thickness of the Martian Impact Crater Tooting
    Meteoritics & Planetary Science 42, Nr 9, 1615–1625 (2007) Abstract available online at http://meteoritics.org Crater geometry and ejecta thickness of the Martian impact crater Tooting Peter J. MOUGINIS-MARK and Harold GARBEIL Hawai‘i Institute of Geophysics and Planetology, University of Hawai‘i, Honolulu, Hawai‘i 96822, USA (Received 25 October 2006; revision accepted 04 March 2007) Abstract–We use Mars Orbiter Laser Altimeter (MOLA) topographic data and Thermal Emission Imaging System (THEMIS) visible (VIS) images to study the cavity and the ejecta blanket of a very fresh Martian impact crater ~29 km in diameter, with the provisional International Astronomical Union (IAU) name Tooting crater. This crater is very young, as demonstrated by the large depth/ diameter ratio (0.065), impact melt preserved on the walls and floor, an extensive secondary crater field, and only 13 superposed impact craters (all 54 to 234 meters in diameter) on the ~8120 km2 ejecta blanket. Because the pre-impact terrain was essentially flat, we can measure the volume of the crater cavity and ejecta deposits. Tooting crater has a rim height that has >500 m variation around the rim crest and a very large central peak (1052 m high and >9 km wide). Crater cavity volume (i.e., volume below the pre-impact terrain) is ~380 km3 and the volume of materials above the pre-impact terrain is ~425 km3. The ejecta thickness is often very thin (<20 m) throughout much of the ejecta blanket. There is a pronounced asymmetry in the ejecta blanket, suggestive of an oblique impact, which has resulted in up to ~100 m of additional ejecta thickness being deposited down-range compared to the up-range value at the same radial distance from the rim crest.
    [Show full text]
  • Psychology of Space Exploration Psychology of About the Book Douglas A
    About the Editor Contemporary Research in Historical Perspective Psychology of Space Exploration Psychology of About the Book Douglas A. Vakoch is a professor in the Department As we stand poised on the verge of a new era of of Clinical Psychology at the California Institute of spaceflight, we must rethink every element, including Integral Studies, as well as the director of Interstellar Space Exploration the human dimension. This book explores some of the Message Composition at the SETI Institute. Dr. Vakoch Contemporary Research in Historical Perspective contributions of psychology to yesterday’s great space is a licensed psychologist in the state of California, and Edited by Douglas A. Vakoch race, today’s orbiter and International Space Station mis- his psychological research, clinical, and teaching interests sions, and tomorrow’s journeys beyond Earth’s orbit. include topics in psychotherapy, ecopsychology, and meth- Early missions into space were typically brief, and crews odologies of psychological research. As a corresponding were small, often drawn from a single nation. As an member of the International Academy of Astronautics, intensely competitive space race has given way to inter- Dr. Vakoch chairs that organization’s Study Groups on national cooperation over the decades, the challenges of Interstellar Message Construction and Active SETI. communicating across cultural boundaries and dealing Through his membership in the International Institute with interpersonal conflicts have become increasingly of Space Law, he examines
    [Show full text]
  • Peak-Ring Structure and Kinematics from a Multi-Disciplinary Study of the Schro¨Dinger Impact Basin
    ARTICLE Received 19 Jan 2015 | Accepted 26 Aug 2016 | Published 20 Oct 2016 DOI: 10.1038/ncomms13161 OPEN Peak-ring structure and kinematics from a multi-disciplinary study of the Schro¨dinger impact basin David A. Kring1, Georgiana Y. Kramer1, Gareth S. Collins2, Ross W.K. Potter1,w & Mitali Chandnani1,3 The Schro¨dinger basin on the lunar farside is B320 km in diameter and the best-preserved peak-ring basin of its size in the Earth–Moon system. Here we present spectral and photogeologic analyses of data from the Moon Mineralogy Mapper instrument on the Chandrayaan-1 spacecraft and the Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter Camera (LROC) on the LRO spacecraft, which indicates the peak ring is composed of anorthositic, noritic and troctolitic lithologies that were juxtaposed by several cross-cutting faults during peak-ring formation. Hydrocode simulations indicate the lithologies were uplifted from depths up to 30 km, representing the crust of the lunar farside. Through combining geological and remote-sensing observations with numerical modelling, we show that a Displaced Structural Uplift model is best for peak rings, including that in the K–T Chicxulub impact crater on Earth. These results may help guide sample selection in lunar sample return missions that are being studied for the multi-agency International Space Exploration Coordination Group. 1 Center for Lunar Science and Exploration, Lunar and Planetary Institute, Universities Space Research Association, 3600 Bay Area Boulevard, Houston, Texas 77058, USA. 2 Impacts and Astromaterials Research Centre, Department of Earth Science and Engineering, Imperial College London, London SW7 2AZ, UK. 3 Department of Geosciences, University of Alaska, Fairbanks, Alaska 99775, USA.
    [Show full text]
  • Memorial Tributes: Volume 13
    THE NATIONAL ACADEMIES PRESS This PDF is available at http://nap.edu/12734 SHARE Memorial Tributes: Volume 13 DETAILS 338 pages | 6 x 9 | HARDBACK ISBN 978-0-309-14225-0 | DOI 10.17226/12734 CONTRIBUTORS GET THIS BOOK National Academy of Engineering FIND RELATED TITLES Visit the National Academies Press at NAP.edu and login or register to get: – Access to free PDF downloads of thousands of scientific reports – 10% off the price of print titles – Email or social media notifications of new titles related to your interests – Special offers and discounts Distribution, posting, or copying of this PDF is strictly prohibited without written permission of the National Academies Press. (Request Permission) Unless otherwise indicated, all materials in this PDF are copyrighted by the National Academy of Sciences. Copyright © National Academy of Sciences. All rights reserved. Memorial Tributes: Volume 13 Memorial Tributes NATIONAL ACADEMY OF ENGINEERING FFrontront MMatter.inddatter.indd i 33/23/10/23/10 33:40:26:40:26 PMPM Copyright National Academy of Sciences. All rights reserved. Memorial Tributes: Volume 13 FFrontront MMatter.inddatter.indd iiii 33/23/10/23/10 33:40:27:40:27 PMPM Copyright National Academy of Sciences. All rights reserved. Memorial Tributes: Volume 13 NATIONAL ACADEMY OF ENGINEERING OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA Memorial Tributes Volume 13 THE NATIONAL ACADEMIES PRESS Washington, D.C. 2010 FFrontront MMatter.inddatter.indd iiiiii 33/23/10/23/10 33:40:27:40:27 PMPM Copyright National Academy of Sciences. All rights reserved. Memorial Tributes: Volume 13 International Standard Book Number-13: 978-0-309-14225-0 International Standard Book Number-10: 0-309-14225-3 Additional copies of this publication are available from: The National Academies Press 500 Fifth Street, N.W.
    [Show full text]
  • Jetting During Oblique Impacts of Spherical Impactors
    Jetting during oblique impacts of spherical impactors Shigeru Wakitaa,∗, Brandon Johnsona, C. Adeene Dentona, Thomas M. Davisonb aDepartment of Earth, Atmospheric, and Planetary Sciences, Purdue University, West Lafayette, IN, 47907, USA bDepartment of Earth Science and Engineering, Imperial College London, London, UK Abstract During the early stages of an impact a small amount material may be jetted and ejected at speeds exceeding the impact velocity. Jetting is an important process for producing melt during relatively low velocity impacts. How impact angle affects the jetting process has yet to be fully understood. Here, we simulate jetting during oblique impacts using the iSALE shock physics code. Assuming both the target and impactor have the same composition (dunite), we examine the jetted material which exceeds the impact velocity. Our results show that oblique impacts always produce more jetted ejecta than vertical impacts, except for grazing impacts with impact angles < 15◦. A 45◦ impact with an impact velocity of 3 km/s produces jetted material equal to ∼ 7% of the impactor mass. This is 6 times the jetted mass produced by a vertical impact with similar impact conditions. We also find that the origin of jetted ejecta depends on impact angle; for impact angles less than 45◦, most of the jet is composed of impactor material, while at higher impact angles the jet is dominated by target material. Our findings are consistent with previous experimental work. In all cases, jetted materials are preferentially distributed downrange of the impactor. arXiv:2102.02303v1 [astro-ph.EP] 3 Feb 2021 Keywords: Impact processes, Collisional physics, Asteroids ∗Corresponding author Preprint submitted to Elsevier February 5, 2021 1.
    [Show full text]
  • The Sidereal Times
    Observe—Educate—Have Fun October 2019 The Sidereal Times The Official Newsletter of The Albuquerque Astronomical Society P.O. Box 50581, Albuquerque, New Mexico 87181-0581 www.TAAS.org Our 60th AnniverSAry Since 1959 General Meeting News Lynne Olson TAAS Astronomy 101 “Great Observing Sites in New Mexico” Saturday, October 19 - 6:00pm Regener Hall, UNM Campus Free and open to the public white dwArf rAdiAl TAAS General Meeting “White Dwarfs: The Most Wonderful of All Stars!” Saturday, October 19 - 7:00pm Regener Hall, UNM Campus Free and open to the public Alan Scott’s Telescope Our featured speaker at the TAAS General Meet- ing Oct. 19 will be Dr. John McGraw. His topic: “White Before the tAAS GenerAl MeetinG on Oct. 19, Dwarfs: The Most Wonderful of All Stars!” TAAS member Alan Scott will present Astronomy 101. His topic: “Great Observing Sites in New Mexico The text that follows is by Dr. McGraw: and Where to Find Them.” In about 5 billion years, our Sun will end its normal This is a must for those wanting to use their tele- lifetime of fusing hydrogen and helium to heavier at- scopes somewhere other than their backyard and oms, such as carbon and oxygen, and finally end its 10 to locate the best dark-sky areas in our state! billion-year life as a white dwarf star. continued on page 4 . continued on page 6 . Placitas Star Party TAAS Fabulous 50 TAAS/NWR Public Placitas Elementary Fall Session Star Party Sat., October 12 All Saints of North America Valle de Oro N.W.R.
    [Show full text]
  • Constraining the Size of the South Pole-Aitken Basin Impact ⇑ R.W.K
    Icarus 220 (2012) 730–743 Contents lists available at SciVerse ScienceDirect Icarus journal homepage: www.elsevier.com/locate/icarus Constraining the size of the South Pole-Aitken basin impact ⇑ R.W.K. Potter a, , G.S. Collins a, W.S. Kiefer b,c, P.J. McGovern b,c, D.A. Kring b,c a Impacts and Astromaterials Research Centre, Dept. of Earth Science and Engineering, Imperial College London, London SW7 2AZ, UK b Center for Lunar Science and Exploration, Lunar and Planetary Institute, 3600 Bay Area Boulevard, Houston, TX 77058, USA c NASA Lunar Science Institute article info abstract Article history: The South Pole-Aitken (SPA) basin is the largest and oldest definitive impact structure on the Moon. To Received 13 October 2011 understand how this immense basin formed, we conducted a suite of SPA-scale numerical impact simu- Revised 21 May 2012 lations varying impactor size, impact velocity, and lithospheric thermal gradient. We compared our Accepted 23 May 2012 model results to observational SPA basin data to constrain a best-fit scenario for the SPA basin-forming Available online 13 June 2012 impact. Our results show that the excavation depth-to-diameter ratio for SPA-scale impacts is constant for all impact scenarios and is consistent with analytical and geological estimates of excavation depth Keywords: in smaller craters, suggesting that SPA-scale impacts follow proportional scaling. Steep near-surface ther- Impact processes mal gradients and high internal temperatures greatly affected the basin-forming process, basin structure Cratering Moon and impact-generated melt volume. In agreement with previous numerical studies of SPA-scale impacts, Collisional physics crustal material is entirely removed from the basin center which is instead occupied by a large melt pool of predominantly mantle composition.
    [Show full text]
  • The Scientific Context for Exploration of the Moon
    Committee on the Scientific Context for Exploration of the Moon Space Studies Board Division on Engineering and Physical Sciences THE NATIONAL ACADEMIES PRESS 500 Fifth Street, N.W. Washington, DC 20001 NOTICE: The project that is the subject of this report was approved by the Governing Board of the National Research Council, whose members are drawn from the councils of the National Academy of Sciences, the National Academy of Engineering, and the Institute of Medicine. The members of the committee responsible for the report were chosen for their special competences and with regard for appropriate balance. This study is based on work supported by the Contract NASW-010001 between the National Academy of Sciences and the National Aeronautics and Space Administration. Any opinions, findings, conclusions, or recommendations expressed in this publication are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the views of the agency that provided support for the project. International Standard Book Number-13: 978-0-309-10919-2 International Standard Book Number-10: 0-309-10919-1 Cover: Design by Penny E. Margolskee. All images courtesy of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration. Copies of this report are available free of charge from: Space Studies Board National Research Council 500 Fifth Street, N.W. Washington, DC 20001 Additional copies of this report are available from the National Academies Press, 500 Fifth Street, N.W., Lockbox 285, Washington, DC 20055; (800) 624-6242 or (202) 334-3313 (in the Washington metropolitan area); Internet, http://www.nap. edu. Copyright 2007 by the National Academy of Sciences. All rights reserved.
    [Show full text]
  • Making the Russian Bomb from Stalin to Yeltsin
    MAKING THE RUSSIAN BOMB FROM STALIN TO YELTSIN by Thomas B. Cochran Robert S. Norris and Oleg A. Bukharin A book by the Natural Resources Defense Council, Inc. Westview Press Boulder, San Francisco, Oxford Copyright Natural Resources Defense Council © 1995 Table of Contents List of Figures .................................................. List of Tables ................................................... Preface and Acknowledgements ..................................... CHAPTER ONE A BRIEF HISTORY OF THE SOVIET BOMB Russian and Soviet Nuclear Physics ............................... Towards the Atomic Bomb .......................................... Diverted by War ............................................. Full Speed Ahead ............................................ Establishment of the Test Site and the First Test ................ The Role of Espionage ............................................ Thermonuclear Weapons Developments ............................... Was Joe-4 a Hydrogen Bomb? .................................. Testing the Third Idea ...................................... Stalin's Death and the Reorganization of the Bomb Program ........ CHAPTER TWO AN OVERVIEW OF THE STOCKPILE AND COMPLEX The Nuclear Weapons Stockpile .................................... Ministry of Atomic Energy ........................................ The Nuclear Weapons Complex ...................................... Nuclear Weapon Design Laboratories ............................... Arzamas-16 .................................................. Chelyabinsk-70
    [Show full text]
  • The Space Race Documented Through Front Pages of Newspapers from Around North America
    The News Frontier The Space Race documented through front pages of newspapers from around North America Newspapers and patches generously donated to the McAuliffe-Shepard Discovery Center by Jerrid Kenney After the end of World War II, a new battle began: the Cold War. In the mid-20th century, the United States and the Soviet Union were each trying to prove they were better than the other. Both sides wanted to show the superiority of their technology, military, and, by extension, their political systems. Starting in the late 1950s, the battlefront reached space. The United States and the Soviet Union fought to first achieve milestones in space exploration—starting in 1957 with the Soviet Union’s launch of Sputnik I, continuing through the U.S.’s landing astronauts on the Moon in 1969, and ending with a handshake in space between American astronauts and Soviet cosmonauts in 1975. Witness the fight for extraterrestrial might by reading about the United States and the Soviet Union’s major feats of the Space Race, as recorded in American and Canadian newspapers in real time. The Space Race Over Time July 15-24, 1975 February 20, 1962 May 28, 1964 The Space Race comes October 4, 1957 April 12, 1961 July 20, 1969 John Glenn becomes NASA launches to an end with the Soviet Union Yuri Gagarin Neil Armstrong first American to unmanned Saturn I Apollo-Soyuz Test launches first becomes first becomes the first orbit the Earth rocket as first step Project, the in-orbit artificial satellite human in space human to walk on of the Apollo the Moon docking of U.S.
    [Show full text]
  • Ensuring Strategic Stability in the Past and Present: Theoretical and Applied Questions
    Ensuring Strategic Stability in the Past and Present: Theoretical and Applied Questions By Andrei Kokoshin Foreword by Graham Allison Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs Harvard Kennedy School 79 JFK Street Cambridge, MA 02138 Fax: (617) 495-8963 Email: [email protected] Website: http://belfercenter.org Copyright 2011 President and Fellows of Harvard College Ensuring Strategic Stability in the Past and Present: Theoretical and Applied Questions By Andrei Kokoshin Foreword by Graham Allison June 2011 This paper was commissioned by the Nuclear Threat Initiative. The Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs would like to thank the Nuclear Threat Initiative for its support and financial sponsorship of this work. Table of Contents Foreword by Graham Allison: 2 Introduction: 4 Chapter 1: On the Path toward Defining Strategic Stability 10 Chapter 2: On the Principles and Parameters of Strategic Stability 20 Chapter 3: Challenges of Ensuring the Capability for a Guaranteed Response Strike and Demonstrating Such a Capability 26 Chapter 4: Challenges of Preventing Accidental or Unsanctioned Use of Nuclear Weapons 29 Chapter 5: The Goal of Preventing Escalatory Domination 30 Chapter 6: On Tactical and Operational-Tactical Nuclear Weapons 33 Chapter 7: Nuclear Deterrence as a Combination of “Vulnerability-Invulnerability” 34 Chapter 8: A Set of Measures for Ensuring Strategic Stability as an Example of an “Asymmetric Response” to Ronald Reagan’s Strategic Defense Initiative 36 Chapter 9: Latest Trends in the Development
    [Show full text]