Optical meteor fluxes and application to the 2015 Perseids

This paper outlines new methods to measure optical meteor fluxes for showers and sporadic sources. Many past approaches have found the collecting area of a detector at a fixed 100 km altitude, but this approach considers the full volume, finding the area in 2 km height intervals based on the positio...

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Veröffentlicht in:Monthly notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 2016-11, Vol.463 (1), p.441-448
Hauptverfasser: Blaauw, R. C., Campbell-Brown, M., Kingery, A.
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:This paper outlines new methods to measure optical meteor fluxes for showers and sporadic sources. Many past approaches have found the collecting area of a detector at a fixed 100 km altitude, but this approach considers the full volume, finding the area in 2 km height intervals based on the position of the shower or sporadic source radiant and the population's velocity. Here, the stellar limiting magnitude is found every 10 min during clear periods and converted to a limiting meteor magnitude for the shower or sporadic source having fluxes measured, which is then converted to a limiting mass. The final output is a mass-limited flux for meteor showers or sporadic sources. Presented are the results of these flux methods as applied to the 2015 Perseid meteor shower as seen by the Meteoroid Environment Office's eight wide-field cameras. The peak Perseid flux on the night of 2015 August 13 was measured to be 0.002989 meteoroids/km2/hr down to 0.00051 g, corresponding to a ZHR of 100.7.
ISSN:0035-8711
1365-2966
DOI:10.1093/mnras/stw1979