MU Head Echo Observations of the 2010 Geminids

MU Head Echo Observations of the 2010 Geminids

EGU Journal Logos (RGB) Open Access Open Access Open Access Ann. Geophys., 31, 439–449, 2013 www.ann-geophys.net/31/439/2013/ Advances in Annales Nonlinear Processes doi:10.5194/angeo-31-439-2013 © Author(s) 2013. CC Attribution 3.0 License.Geosciences Geophysicae in Geophysics Open Access Open Access Natural Hazards Natural Hazards and Earth System and Earth System Sciences Sciences MU head echo observations of the 2010 Geminids: radiant, orbit,Discussions Open Access Open Access and meteor flux observingAtmospheric biases Atmospheric Chemistry Chemistry J. Kero1, C. Szasz1, and T. Nakamura2 and Physics and Physics 1 Swedish Institute of Space Physics (IRF), P.O. Box 812, 981 28 Kiruna, Sweden Discussions 2 Open Access National Institute of Polar Research (NIPR), 10-3 Midoricho, Tachikawa,Open Access 190-8518 Tokyo, Japan Atmospheric Atmospheric Correspondence to: J. Kero ([email protected]) Measurement Measurement Received: 31 July 2012 – Revised: 23 January 2013Techniques – Accepted: 2 February 2013 – Published: 6 March 2013Techniques Discussions Open Access Abstract. We report Geminid meteor head echo observations independent investigations and modelling approaches sum-Open Access with the high-power large-aperture (HPLA) Shigaraki mid- marized by Ryabova (1999). Biogeosciences dle and upper atmosphere (MU) radar inBiogeosciences Japan (34.85◦ N, The widely recognized parent body of the Geminids is Discussions 136.10◦ E). The MU radar observation campaign was con- the asteroid (3200) Phaethon. Despite observational searches ducted from 13 December 2010, 08:00 UTC to 15 Decem- (e.g. Hsieh and Jewitt, 2005; Wiegert et al., 2008), no evi- ber, 20:00 UTC and resulted in 48 h of radar data. A total of dence of current mass loss from Phaethon was reported be- Open Access Open Access ∼ 270 Geminids were observed among ∼ 8800 meteor head fore an unexpected brightening by a factor of twoClimate that started echoes with precisely determined orbits. The GeminidClimate head 20 .2±0.2 UTC, June 2009 (Jewitt and Li, 2010). The bright- echo activity is consistent with an earlier peak than the visual ening was interpreted as an impulsive releaseof the of dust Past particles of the Past 8 Geminid activity determined by the International Meteor Or- with a combined mass of ∼ 2.5 × 10 kg, or approximatelyDiscussions ganization (IMO). The observed flux of Geminids is a factor 10−4 of the total Geminid stream mass. ∼ Open Access of 3 lower than the previously reported flux of the 2009 Jewitt and Li (2010) suggest that Phaethon is a rock cometOpen Access Orionids measured with an identical MU radar setup. We use in which dust is produced by thermalEarth fracture System at the high the observed flux ratio to discuss the relationEarth between System the surface temperatures (∼ 1000 K) experienced near perihelion head echo mass–velocity selection effect, the massDynamics distribu- (q = 0.14 AU). Particles smaller than ∼ 1Dynamics mm in radius can- tion indices of meteor showers and the mass threshold of the not be held by Phaethon against radiation pressureDiscussions this close MU radar. to the Sun and are removed from the parent body irrespec- tive of ejection velocity. Modelling work by Ryabova (2012) Open Access Keywords. Atmospheric composition and structureGeoscientific (Mid- Geoscientific Open Access dle atmosphere – composition and chemistry) – Interplane- shows that the observed dust release in 2009 may give rise to tary physics (Interplanetary dust) – IonosphereInstrumentation (Ion chem- a minor outburst exceeding the usualInstrumentation level of Geminid activ- = ◦ istry and composition) Methods andity in 2017 at solar longitude λ 262.5Methods. and Phaethon’s spectral properties in the visible and near- Data Systemsinfrared are different from the propertiesData of the Systems few comet nu- clei properly observed at these wavelengths andDiscussions more similar Open Access Open Access to asteroid spectra (Licandro et al., 2007Geoscientific). Nevertheless, the 1 Introduction Geoscientificobserved structure of the regular Geminid stream agrees with the cometary scenario of itsModel origin ( RyabovaDevelopment, 2001, 2007). Model Development Each year in mid-December, the Earth passes through a Specular meteor radar and visual observationsDiscussions of the Gem- stream of dust giving rise to the Geminid meteor shower. inids contain abundant observational evidence of decreas- The Geminid activity is very stable and has been observed ing meteor magnitude (increasing meteoroid mass) as theOpen Access Open Access every year in mid-December since 1862 (JonesHydrology, 1978). The andshower progresses. The first evidenceHydrology of a Geminid and mag- discovery of this shower is surprisingly recent, given that the nitude dispersion was provided by Plavcova´ (1962), us- age of the Geminid meteoroid stream has beenEarth estimated System to ing the Ondrejovˇ radar (49.55◦ N,Earth 14.47◦ E).System Subsequent be of the order of thousands of years, according toSciences several Sciences Discussions Open Access Published by Copernicus Publications on behalf of the EuropeanOpen Access Geosciences Union. Ocean Science Ocean Science Discussions Open Access Open Access Solid Earth Solid Earth Discussions Open Access Open Access The Cryosphere The Cryosphere Discussions 440 J. Kero et al.: MU head echo observations of the 2010 Geminids investigations have been detailed, e.g. by Jones (1978); flux with the previously reported flux of the 2009 Orionids McIntosh and Simek (1980); Jones and Morton (1982); (Kero et al., 2011). Simek and McIntosh (1989); Uchiyama (2010). The reason for the Geminid magnitude dispersal is the mass-dependent radiative dispersal of meteoroid orbits, 2 Meteor head echo radar observations mainly due to the Poynting–Robertson (P–R) effect (e.g. Wy- A meteor head echo is caused by radio waves scattered from att and Whipple, 1950; Briggs, 1962; Ryabova, 1999, and the dense region of plasma surrounding and co-moving with references therein), possibly with an equally large contribu- a meteoroid during atmospheric flight. The signal Doppler tion from the Yarkovsky–Radzievskii effect (Olsson-Steel, shift and/or range rate of the target can therefore be used 1987). to determine meteoroid velocity. The first head echoes were Brown et al. (2008, 2010); Blaauw et al. (2011) present re- particularized by Hey et al. (1947) from observations using sults from the long-term observation programme conducted a 150 kW VHF radar system, conducted 7–11 October 1946, with the Canadian Meteor Orbit Radar (CMOR). CMOR covering the anticipated 1946 Draconid meteor outburst. has provided specular trail echoes in single-station operation Since the 1990s, head echo observations have been con- since 1999 and multi-station orbit data since January 2002. ducted utilizing most high-power large-aperture (HPLA) Several million meteoroid orbits have been detected, and the radar facilities around the world (e.g. Pellinen-Wannberg and radar data are continuously evaluated by several other meth- Wannberg, 1994; Mathews et al., 1997; Close et al., 2000; ods including high-resolution optical measurements. Brown Sato et al., 2000; Chau and Woodman, 2004; Mathews et al., et al. (2010) found that the Geminid stream is broader and 2008; Malhotra and Mathews, 2011). However, only a few longer-lived at small radar particle sizes than had previously observations of shower meteors have hitherto been published been appreciated (Sekanina, 1970). It extends from solar lon- (e.g. Chau and Galindo, 2008; Kero et al., 2011, 2012a). gitude 225◦ to 282◦; or roughly from 7 November to 2 Jan- uary each year. Blaauw et al. (2011) investigated meteor shower mass distribution indices and found for the Geminids 3 MU radar experimental setup an index of 1.65 at peak shower activity. Of the five major showers investigated by Blaauw et al. The 46.5 MHz MU radar has a nominal transmitter peak (2011), the Quadrantids and Geminids consistently had the power of 1 MW and comprises a circular, phased-array an- lowest mass distribution indices, whereas the South Delta tenna with a diameter of 103 m. The antenna field consists Aquariids, Eta Aquariids and Orionids had slightly higher of 475 crossed Yagi antennas with one transmitter/receiver ones. The mass index s is related to the cumulative number module each (Fukao et al., 1985), and has a one-way −3 dB ◦ Nc of meteors with mass m or larger according to full beam width of 3.6 . The beam width is similar to that of The Middle Atmosphere Alomar Radar System (MAARSY; N ∝ m−(s−1). (1) c Latteck et al., 2010) but is wider than for most other HPLA A mass index of 2 would imply that there is approximately radar systems. This gives a comparatively large observing the same mass in each size bin, while s < 2 indicates that volume and, consequently, a larger possibility of observing there is more mass in larger particles. longer meteor trajectories. In this paper we present Geminid meteor head echo ob- The 25-channel digital receiver system of the MU radar servations using the Shigaraki middle and upper atmosphere is described by Hassenpflug et al. (2008). In our meteor (MU) radar in Japan (34.85◦ N, 136.10◦ E). The observations head echo observations, the output from 25 subgroups of were conducted in support of the ECOMA (Existence and 19 Yagi antennas were each stored as the data of separate Charge state Of Meteoric dust particles in the Middle At- digital channels. The receiver system was upgraded from a 4- mosphere) sounding rocket campaign (Rapp and Robertson, channel setup in 2004. Meteor head echo observations prior 2009; Rapp et al., 2012) at the Andoya Rocket Range in Nor- to the upgrade have been reported by Sato et al. (2000) and way (69.29◦ N, 16.02◦ E). The aim of ECOMA is to quan- Nishimura et al. (2001). tify the effect of the Geminids on the properties of meteoric We have developed improved analysis algorithms (Kero smoke particles. et al., 2012c) and collected an extensive set of data (> 500 h) Section 2 gives a brief overview of meteor head echo ob- between June 2009 and December 2010.

View Full Text

Details

  • File Type
    pdf
  • Upload Time
    -
  • Content Languages
    English
  • Upload User
    Anonymous/Not logged-in
  • File Pages
    11 Page
  • File Size
    -

Download

Channel Download Status
Express Download Enable

Copyright

We respect the copyrights and intellectual property rights of all users. All uploaded documents are either original works of the uploader or authorized works of the rightful owners.

  • Not to be reproduced or distributed without explicit permission.
  • Not used for commercial purposes outside of approved use cases.
  • Not used to infringe on the rights of the original creators.
  • If you believe any content infringes your copyright, please contact us immediately.

Support

For help with questions, suggestions, or problems, please contact us