论文标题
基于物理的替代流星的PE标准
Physically based alternative to the PE criterion for meteoroids
论文作者
论文摘要
影响地球大气的流星体通常使用PE标准进行分类。引入了该标准,以通过将其轨道起源和成分特征联系起来来支持火球类型的识别。此外,它被用作流星拉伸强度及其穿透大气的能力的指标。但是,PE标准的分类准确性水平取决于约束从火球观察结果(得出PE值所需的)输入数据值的能力。为了克服这些不确定性并实现更大的分类细节,我们使用缩放定律和无量纲变量提出了一种新的公式,将所有输入变量分组为两个直接从火球观测值获得的参数。这两个参数分别代表了轨迹的发光部分的阻力和质量损失率,并与形状,强度,强度,消融效率,弹丸的矿物学性质以及火球的持续时间相关。因此,新的配方依赖于物理基础。这项工作显示了在相同的PE-Criterion假设下,PE标准与$2αβ$的对数之间的数学等效性。我们证明,$ log(2αβ)$提供了更通用的配方,不需要对流星飞行方案进行任何初步限制,并讨论了新配方将分类扩展到完全分散的火球对包括陨石的大型影响器(包括陨石)的较大影响器之外的适用性。使用草原网络流星观测来验证新公式的可靠性。
Meteoroids impacting the Earth atmosphere are commonly classified using the PE criterion. This criterion was introduced to support the identification of the fireball type by empirically linking its orbital origin and composition characteristics. Additionally, it is used as an indicator of the meteoroid tensile strength and its ability to penetrate the atmosphere. However, the level of classification accuracy of the PE criterion depends on the ability to constrain the value of the input data, retrieved from the fireball observation, required to derive the PE value. To overcome these uncertainties and achieve a greater classification detail we propose a new formulation using scaling laws and dimensionless variables that groups all the input variables into two parameters that are directly obtained from the fireball observations. These two parameters, $α$ and $β$, represent the drag and the mass loss rates along the luminous part of the trajectory, respectively, and are linked to the shape, strength, ablation efficiency, mineralogical nature of the projectile, and duration of the fireball. Thus, the new formulation relies on a physical basis. This work shows the mathematical equivalence between the PE criterion and the logarithm of $2αβ$ under the same PE-criterion assumptions. We demonstrate that $log(2αβ)$ offers a more general formulation which does not require any preliminary constraint on the meteor flight scenario and discuss the suitability of the new formulation for expanding the classification beyond fully disintegrating fireballs to larger impactors including meteorite-dropping fireballs. The reliability of the new formulation is validated using the Prairie Network meteor observations.