Orbital and Physical Characteristics of Meter-scale Impactors from Airburst Observations
P. Brown, P. Wiegert, D. Clark, E. Tagliaferri

TL;DR
This study analyzes 59 meter-scale meteoroids impacting Earth, revealing their diverse physical strengths, mostly asteroidal origins, and potential links to the Taurid meteoroid complex, with no clear size-strength trend.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive analysis of the orbits and physical properties of meter-scale impactors, including their origins and structural characteristics, using observational data and modeling.
Findings
Majority are asteroidal in origin from the inner main belt.
Approximately 10-15% may originate from comets.
No clear correlation between impactor mass and strength.
Abstract
We have analysed the orbits and ablation characteristics in the atmosphere of 59 earth-impacting fireballs, produced by meteoroids one meter in diameter or larger, described here as meter-scale. Using heights at peak luminosity as a proxy for strength, we determine that there is roughly an order of magnitude spread in strengths of the population of meter-scale impactors at the Earth. We use fireballs producing recovered meteorites and well documented fireballs from ground-based camera networks to calibrate our ablation model interpretation of the observed peak height of luminosity as a function of speed. The orbits and physical strength of these objects are consistent with the majority being asteroidal bodies originating from the inner main asteroid belt. We find a lower limit of ~10-15% of our objects have a possible cometary (Jupiter-Family comet and/or Halley-type comet) origin based…
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