Estimating trajectories of meteors: an observational Monte Carlo approach -- II. Results
Denis Vida, Peter G. Brown, Margaret Campbell-Brown, Paul Wiegert,, Peter S. Gural

TL;DR
This paper validates a novel Monte Carlo-based meteor trajectory estimation method through simulations, demonstrating improved accuracy in radiant and velocity measurements across various observation system resolutions.
Contribution
It introduces a new trajectory estimation method tested with realistic simulations, showing superior performance over existing methods for different meteor observation systems.
Findings
The new method outperforms others in high-resolution systems.
Multi-parameter fit methods are better for low-resolution systems.
True radiant dispersion can be reliably measured with appropriate methods.
Abstract
In the first paper of this series we examined existing methods of optical meteor trajectory estimation and developed a novel method which simultaneously uses both the geometry and the dynamics of meteors to constrain their trajectories. We also developed a simulator which uses an ablation model to generate realistic synthetic meteor trajectories which we use to test meteor trajectory solvers. In this second paper, we perform simulation validation to estimate radiant and velocity accuracy which may be achieved by various meteor observation systems as applied to several meteor showers. For low-resolution all-sky systems, where the meteor deceleration is generally not measurable, the multi-parameter fit method assuming a constant velocity better reproduces the radiant and speed of synthetic meteors. For moderate field of view systems, our novel method performs the best at all convergence…
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