On the age and formation mechanism of the core of the Quadrantid meteoroid stream
Abedin Abedin, Pavel Spurny, Paul Wiegert, Petr Pokorny, Jiri, Borovicka, Peter Brown

TL;DR
This study estimates the age of the core of the Quadrantid meteoroid stream to be between 200-300 years using high-precision observational data and numerical integrations, supporting a relatively recent formation linked to asteroid 2003 EH1.
Contribution
First to constrain the age of the Quadrantid stream core using high-precision data and backward-forward numerical modeling to test formation scenarios.
Findings
The stream core is approximately 200-300 years old.
The ejection likely occurred between 1700 and 1800 AD.
The formation is consistent with a recent ejection event from 2003 EH1.
Abstract
The Quadrantid meteor shower is among the strongest annual meteor showers, and has drawn the attention of scientists for several decades. The stream is unusual, among others, for several reasons: its very short duration around maximum activity (~12 - 14 hours) as detected by visual, photographic and radar observations, its recent onset (around 1835 AD) and because it had been the only major stream without an obvious parent body until 2003. Ever since, there have been debates as to the age of the stream and the nature of its proposed parent body, asteroid 2003 EH1. In this work, we present results on the most probable age and formation mechanism of the narrow portion of the Quadrantid meteoroid stream. For the first time we use data on eight high precision photographic Quadrantids, equivalent to gram - kilogram size, to constrain the most likely age of the core of the stream. Out of…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
