论文标题

全球火球天文台

A Global Fireball Observatory

论文作者

Devillepoix, H. A. R., Cupák, M., Bland, P. A., Sansom, E. K., Towner, M. C., Howie, R. M., Hartig, B. A. D., Jansen-Sturgeon, T., Shober, P. M., Anderson, S. L., Benedix, G. K., Busan, D., Sayers, R., Jenniskens, P., Albers, J., Herd, C. D. K., Hill, P. J. A., Brown, P. G., Krzeminski, Z., Osinski, G. R., Aoudjehane, H. Chennaoui, Benkhaldoun, Z., Jabiri, A., Guennoun, M., Barka, A., Darhmaoui, H., Daly, L., Collins, G. S., McMullan, S., Suttle, M. D., Ireland, T., Bonning, G., Baeza, L., Alrefay, T. Y., Horner, J., Swindle, T. D., Hergenrother, C. W., Fries, M. D., Tomkins, A., Langendam, A., Rushmer, T., O'Neill, C., Janches, D., Hormaechea, J. L., Shaw, C., Young, J. S., Alexander, M., Mardon, A. D., Tate, J. R.

论文摘要

世界上的陨石收藏包含非常丰富的图片,说明了早期太阳系的制造,但是对于这些样本而言,缺乏关于其父母的空间背景是一个问题。小行星种群同样丰富地表面矿物质学,将这两个人群(陨石和小行星)绘制在一起是行星科学的主要挑战。直接探测小行星以高成本实现这一目标。另一方面,观察陨石掉落并计算其大气前轨道,是解决问题的一种更便宜的方法。全球火球天文台(GFO)合作成立于2017年,并汇集了多个机构(来自澳大利亚,美国,加拿大,摩洛哥,摩洛哥,沙特阿拉伯,英国和阿根廷),以最大化该地区以供火球观察时间,因此是陨石恢复。成员可以选择独立运作,但他们也可以选择与其他GFO合作伙伴完全协作。这种有效的方法利用了澳大利亚的沙漠火球网络(DFN)探路者项目获得的经验。所有合作伙伴之间共享了最先进的技术(DFN摄像头系统和减少数据)和支持团队的经验,从而为科学调查和陨石搜索提供了时间。随着所有网络的结合在一起,GFO的合作已经覆盖了截至2019年中期的陨石恢复的0.6%,目标是在2020年代初达到2%。我们估计,经过5年的运行,GFO将观察到几乎每种陨石类型的火球。这项综合的努力将为实验室带来新的,新鲜的外地材料,从而产生有关太阳系形成的新见解。

The world's meteorite collections contain a very rich picture of what the early Solar System would have been made of, however the lack of spatial context with respect to their parent population for these samples is an issue. The asteroid population is equally as rich in surface mineralogies, and mapping these two populations (meteorites and asteroids) together is a major challenge for planetary science. Directly probing asteroids achieves this at a high cost. Observing meteorite falls and calculating their pre-atmospheric orbit on the other hand, is a cheaper way to approach the problem. The Global Fireball Observatory (GFO) collaboration was established in 2017 and brings together multiple institutions (from Australia, USA, Canada, Morocco, Saudi Arabia, the UK, and Argentina) to maximise the area for fireball observation time and therefore meteorite recoveries. The members have a choice to operate independently, but they can also choose to work in a fully collaborative manner with other GFO partners. This efficient approach leverages the experience gained from the Desert Fireball Network (DFN) pathfinder project in Australia. The state-of-the art technology (DFN camera systems and data reduction) and experience of the support teams is shared between all partners, freeing up time for science investigations and meteorite searching. With all networks combined together, the GFO collaboration already covers 0.6% of the Earth's surface for meteorite recovery as of mid-2019, and aims to reach 2% in the early 2020s. We estimate that after 5 years of operation, the GFO will have observed a fireball from virtually every meteorite type. This combined effort will bring new, fresh, extra-terrestrial material to the labs, yielding new insights about the formation of the Solar System.

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