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Observations of interplanetary meteoroids with TIRA
Authors:K Merz  R Jehn  M Landgraf
Institution:a European Space Operations Centre, Robert-Bosch-Str. 5, D-64293 Darmstadt, Germany
b Forschungsgesellschaft für angewandte Naturwissenschaften, Neuenahrer Str. 20, D-53343 Wachtberg, Germany
Abstract:The Tracking and Imaging RAdar (TIRA) at the Research Establishment for Applied Science (FGAN) was used in the L-band (1.33 GHz) to observe the Leonid shower in 1999. The radar beam was pointed directly into the radiant in the constellation Leo to receive “head echoes” from meteoroids when they ablate in the atmosphere at altitudes around 100 km. Two hundred and eighty-seven meteors were observed during 21 h in the early hours of November 17 and 18, 1999. The individual velocities, radiants and rough heliocentric orbits are calculated. Criteria are derived from optically observed Leonids which are then applied to decide whether an echo was created by a Leonid or a background meteoroid. However, in most cases the accuracy in the observational data is not good enough to allow for a clear distinction. Only for 100 meteors the velocity errors were less than 10 km/s. Out of those, 71 could be excluded on a 3σ level to be a Leonid (95 are excluded on a 1σ level). This confirms the theory that the Leonids have dominantly sizes of optical meteoroids with no significant extension in the lower mass range. Therefore, the risk of meteoroid impacts on spacecraft does not increase considerably during a Leonid storm. Background measurements 9 days after the Leonids maximum were taken in 2001 which corroborated the overall results obtained in 1999.
Keywords:Leonids  Meteoroids  Radar  Head echoes  Meteor shower  Comet:Individual-55P/Tempel-Tuttle
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