by Chris Peterson » Tue Sep 06, 2016 1:49 pm
geckzilla wrote:I've been dubious about the "spiraling" meteor imagery, myself. When I question it, though, the photographer will swear their system was motionless and that the meteorite must be spiraling.
Yeah. But even the best small telescopes and camera mounts wiggle. Photographers are seldom aware of this, because it all averages out into a very small increase in stellar diameters, largely indistinguishable from seeing effects. It is only apparent when something fast happens, like a meteor. You can also see it by stopping tracking, allowing stars to trail. At spots along the star tracks little wiggles show up- wind gusts, earthquakes, trucks on the highway- hard to know what, but lots of things can drive brief resonances in a mechanical system. Harmless for normal imaging, but quite startling with a meteor.
Dynamically, if you work out the forces that a meteoroid would experience spiraling or wiggling enough to be seen on an image, there's no way the particle would survive. Today's image, of course, doesn't show a hint of spiral or wiggle in the meteor, only the unsubstantiated suggestion that the shape of the train material is somehow caused by the rotation of the meteoroid- unlikely or even impossible. (Not the rotation of the particle- that can certainly happen; just the notion that the shape of the train is impacted by that.)
[quote="geckzilla"]I've been dubious about the "spiraling" meteor imagery, myself. When I question it, though, the photographer will swear their system was motionless and that the meteorite must be spiraling.[/quote]
Yeah. But even the best small telescopes and camera mounts wiggle. Photographers are seldom aware of this, because it all averages out into a very small increase in stellar diameters, largely indistinguishable from seeing effects. It is only apparent when something fast happens, like a meteor. You can also see it by stopping tracking, allowing stars to trail. At spots along the star tracks little wiggles show up- wind gusts, earthquakes, trucks on the highway- hard to know what, but lots of things can drive brief resonances in a mechanical system. Harmless for normal imaging, but quite startling with a meteor.
Dynamically, if you work out the forces that a meteoroid would experience spiraling or wiggling enough to be seen on an image, there's no way the particle would survive. Today's image, of course, doesn't show a hint of spiral or wiggle in the meteor, only the unsubstantiated suggestion that the shape of the train material is somehow caused by the rotation of the meteoroid- unlikely or even impossible. (Not the rotation of the particle- that can certainly happen; just the notion that the shape of the train is impacted by that.)