News on asteroids
- Infrared survey exposes Nnera-Earth asteroid threaths
- ESA invites amateur astronomers to asteroid-hunti
- Dawn uncovers mineraology of the asteroid Vesta
- Dawn sees new surface features on giant asteroid
- Near-miss asteroid will pass earth again in 2013
- Asteroid hits house in Oslo, Norway
- Space-environment of an asteroid
- Bus-sized asteroid passes Earth
- Vesta is most likely cold enough to contain water-ice
- First images of Vesta from low-orbit
- Fresh impact craters on asteroid Vesta
- Take a virtual 3D tour over asteroid Vesta
- High-school student doubles NEO-tracking accuracy
- Asteroid YU55 is just a pile of rocks
- More images of asteroid 2005 YU55
- New video of asteroid 2005 YU55
- Asteroid Lutetia: A rare surviver from the birth of the Earth
- First video of asteroid 2005YU55
- New images of asteroid passing Earth
- 400m asteroid passes Earth tuesday
- Asteroid Lutetia is a "failed planet"
- Large asteroid passing Earth nov. 4
- Researchers reconstruct asteroid impact
- Asteroid displays comet-like tail
- The mysteries of asteroid Minerva and its moons
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Looking down at a Perseid-meteor from space
Wednesday, 17 August 2011 10:07
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| Solar system - Asteroids |
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Many people have spent time outdoors under a dark sky, watching for “shooting stars” to streak across the firmament. In some cultures, this event is an occasion to make a wish; in others it is viewed as a herald of important events, such as the birth of a future ruler. While not actual stars, “shooting stars” do come from outer space, in the form of meteoroids entering the Earth’s atmosphere. Meteoroids are small objects moving through the solar system that are attracted to the Earth by its gravitational pull. These small objects—typically fragments of asteroids or comets, though they can also originate from the Moon or Mars—begin to heat and burn up as they collide with air molecules in Earth’s atmosphere, creating a bright vapor trail or streak. At this point, the object is known as a meteor. If any remnant of the object survives to impact the Earth’s surface, it becomes known as a meteorite. While most meteorites are natural in origin, on occasion manmade space debris can reenter the atmosphere and also become a meteor or even a meteorite! This astronaut photograph, taken from the International Space Station while over China (approximately 400 kilometers to the northwest of Beijing), provides the unusual perspective of looking down on a meteor as it passes through the atmosphere. The image was taken on August 13, 2011, during the Perseid Meteor Shower that occurs every August. The Perseid meteors are particles that originate from Comet Swift-Tuttle; the comet’s orbit is close enough for these particles to be swept up by the Earth’s gravitational field every year—leading to one of the most dependable meteor shower displays. Green and yellow airglow appears in thin layers above the limb of the Earth, extending from image left to the upper right. Atoms and molecules above 50 kilometers in the atmosphere are excited by sunlight during the day, and then release this energy at night, producing primarily green light that is observable from orbit. Part of a space station solar panel is visible at image upper right; behind the panel, a bright region indicates the Sun low on the horizon.
Astronaut photograph ISS028-E-24847 was acquired on August 13, 2011, with a Nikon D3S digital camera using a 22 mm lens, and is provided by the ISS Crew Earth Observations experiment and Image Science & Analysis Laboratory, Johnson Space Center. The image was taken by the Expedition 28 crew. Source: Astronaut Photography of Earth. |




