The Global Meteor Network – Methodology and first results

Author:

Vida Denis12ORCID,Šegon Damir34,Gural Peter S5,Brown Peter G12,McIntyre Mark J M6,Dijkema Tammo Jan7,Pavletić Lovro8,Kukić Patrik9,Mazur Michael J1,Eschman Peter10,Roggemans Paul11,Merlak Aleksandar12,Zubović Dario4

Affiliation:

1. Department of Physics and Astronomy, University of Western Ontario, London, Ontario N6A 3K7, Canada

2. Institute for Earth and Space Exploration, University of Western Ontario, London, Ontario N6A 5B8, Canada

3. Astronomical Society Istra Pula, Park Monte Zaro 2, HR-52100 Pula, Croatia

4. Višnjan Science and Education Center, Istarska 5, HR-51463 Višnjan, Croatia

5. Gural Software and Analysis LLC, Lovettsville, Virginia 20180, USA

6. Tackley Observatory, 40 Medcroft Road, Tackley, Oxfordshire OX5 3AH, UK

7. ASTRON, Netherlands Institute for Radio Astronomy, Oude Hoogeveensedijk 4, NL-7991 PD Dwingeloo, the Netherlands

8. Department of Physics, University of Rijeka, HR-51000 Rijeka, Croatia

9. Faculty of Electrical Engineering and Computing, University of Zagreb, HR-10000 Zagreb, Croatia

10. New Mexico Meteor Array, Albuquerque, New Mexico, USA

11. Pijnboomstraat 25, B-2800 Mechelen, Belgium

12. Istrastream d.o.o, Stanica Roč 1/1, HR-52425 Roč, Croatia

Abstract

ABSTRACT The Global Meteor Network (GMN) utilizes highly sensitive low-cost CMOS video cameras which run open-source meteor detection software on Raspberry Pi computers. Currently, over 450 GMN cameras in 30 countries are deployed. The main goal of the network is to provide long-term characterization of the radiants, flux, and size distribution of annual meteor showers and outbursts in the optical meteor mass range. The rapid 24-h publication cycle the orbital data will enhance the public situational awareness of the near-Earth meteoroid environment. The GMN also aims to increase the number of instrumentally observed meteorite falls and the transparency of data reduction methods. A novel astrometry calibration method is presented which allows decoupling of the camera pointing from the distortion, and is used for frequent pointing calibrations through the night. Using wide-field cameras (88° × 48°) with a limiting stellar magnitude of +6.0 ± 0.5 at 25 frames per second, over 220 000 precise meteoroid orbits were collected since 2018 December until 2021 June. The median radiant precision of all computed trajectories is 0.47°, 0.32° for $\sim 20{{\ \rm per\ cent}}$ of meteors which were observed from 4 + stations, a precision sufficient to measure physical dispersions of meteor showers. All non-daytime annual established meteor showers were observed during that time, including five outbursts. An analysis of a meteorite-dropping fireball is presented which showed visible wake, fragmentation details, and several discernible fragments. It had spatial trajectory fit errors of only ∼40 m, which translated into the estimated radiant and velocity errors of 3 arcmin and tens of meters per second.

Funder

NASA

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Space and Planetary Science,Astronomy and Astrophysics

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