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To answer these questions researchers from the Marshall Space Flight Center hope to capture a piece of the comet Tempel-Tuttle. Tuesday's meteor storm is like "room service for science", says Dr. David Noever, a member of the Astrobiology Institute. "Instead of us going to the comet, it's coming to us." |
![]() High above the clouds and far away from city lights the view could be spectacular. Live video from the flight will be available to the public at Leonids Live! in RealVideo format beginning approximately 0800 UT November 17th (0200 CST). Video and images from the NASA's East Asia plane flights will also be posted at that web site. ![]() Above: This photo from a laboratory experiment shows the cone-shaped track made by a tiny high-velocity particle in aerogel. The captured particle is located just beyond the narrow end of the cone. Photo credit NASA/JPL. ![]() Right: Aerogel Capture Experiment Hardware. Magnification of sample wells containing low-density silica capture media." According to Dr. David Noever, "The drawback I see is that we are forced to catch everything from ground to 100,000 feet, mainly because we do not have time to fashion a remote control door that opens or closes to expose the capture media. This experiment should be considered an engineering test, and we'll make improvements prior to the 1999 Leonid shower." |
Prelude to Stardust![]() "The transparency of aerogel is critical to the success of Stardust; tracing particle tracks by eye or microscope requires a reasonably clear material", explained David Noever. Aerogel made on earth is not perfectly transparent because of irregularities in the pores which permeate the substance (aerogel is 99% empty space). There is some evidence that aerogels manufactured in low gravity are much clearer, and an experiment was just conducted on space shuttle mission STS-95 to test the idea. "Space-manufactured aerogels could significantly improve our ability to capture comet particles," commented David Noever. "Using centrifuges we can make aerogel with a density gradient: low density on one side for low damage particle capture, backed by a denser section to insure nothing escapes out the other side. This kind of thin-to-dense aerogel is unique in this dust capture business and may be unique to the way we make aerogel in space. It's an open question at the moment." When Stardust swings by Earth in January 2006, the aerogel samples encased in a reentry capsule will be jettisoned and parachute to a pre-selected site in the Utah desert. |
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Web Links | |
NASA ASTROBIOLOGY TO SHOWER ATTENTION ON LEONIDS - NASA press release Leonids Live! - Links to live webcasts of the Leonid meteor shower Meteor counts - submit your own meteor counts to NASA! 1998 Leonids Data Bank -- a useful summary of Leonids information from NASA Ames. The November Leonids: Will they Roar? -- from JPL The Stardust mission -- from JPL Comet Tempel Tuttle image archive -- from NASA Ames Eyewitness accounts of the 1966 storm -- an Ames Research Center Archive Satellite Tracking - monitor satellites as they weather the storm NASA's Office of Space Science - press releases and other news related to NASA and astrophysics |
Related Stories: Great Expectations: the 1998 Leonids Meteor Shower -- the basics of the Leonid meteors. Includes eyewitness accounts from the great 1966 storm and observing hints for 1998. Halley's comet returns in bits and pieces -- story posted Oct 20 on the Orionid meteor shower Tune-up for the Leonids - story posted Oct 7, discusses the astronomy of the Giacobinids External Links: The Leonids -- from Gary Kronk Meteors and Comets web site Leonids: the Night of Raining Fire -- Sky &Telescope article The Leonids: King of the Meteor Showers -- Sky &Telescope article |
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Phillips |