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Published July 2008 | public
Journal Article

Leonids 2006 observations of the tail of trails: Where is the comet fluff?

Abstract

In 2006, Earth encountered a trail of dust left by Comet 55P/Tempel-Tuttle two revolutions ago, in A.D. 1932. The resulting Leonid shower outburst was observed by low light level cameras from locations in Spain. The outburst peaked on 2006 Nov. 19d 04h39m ± 3m UT (predicted: 19d 04h50m ± 15m UT), with a FWHM of 43 ± 10 min (predicted: 38 min), at a peak rate of ZHR=80±10/h (predicted: 50–200 per hour). A low level background of older and brighter Filament Leonids (χ∼2.1) was also present, which dominated rates for Leonids brighter than magnitude +4. The 1932-dust outburst was detected among Leonids of +0 magnitude and brighter. These outburst Leonids were much brighter than expected, with a magnitude distribution index χ=2.60±0.15 (predicted: χ=3.47 and up). Trajectories and orbits of 24 meteors were calculated, most of which are part of the Filament component. Those that were identified as 1932-dust grains penetrated just as deep as Leonids in past encounters. We conclude that larger meteoroids than expected were present in the tail of the 1932-dust trail and meteoroids did not end up there because of low density. We also find that the radiant position of meteors in the Filament component scatter in a circle with radius 0.39°, which is wider than in 1998, when the diameter was 0.09°. This supports the hypothesis that the Filament component consists of meteoroids in mean-motion resonances.

Additional Information

© 2008 Elsevier Inc. Received 22 October 2007, Revised 4 February 2008, Available online 8 April 2008. The 2006 Leonid campaign was made possible by NASA's Planetary Astronomy program. K.d.K. received a NSF grant for the SETI Institute REU program. J.M.T.-R. thanks the MEC for a JdC research grant. J.V. received support from Bill Reach at IPAC. We thank operators at CINES (France) for their assistance in using the super-computer for simulations. We also thank Jun-ichi Watanabe and Margaret Campbell-Brown for careful reviews of this paper.

Additional details

Created:
September 15, 2023
Modified:
October 23, 2023