A very young tau-Herculid meteor cluster observed during a 2022 shower outburst
Pavel Koten, David \v{C}apek, Juraj T\'oth, Luk\'a\v{s} Shrben\'y,, Ji\v{r}\'i Borovi\v{c}ka, Jeremie Vaubaillon, Fabian Zander, David, Buttsworth, Stefan Loehle

TL;DR
This paper reports the observation and analysis of a rare tau-Herculid meteor cluster from 2022, providing insights into meteoroid fragmentation and cluster formation processes in the Solar System.
Contribution
It presents the first detailed analysis of a tau-Herculid meteor cluster observed during a shower outburst, including trajectory reconstruction and physical property assessment.
Findings
The cluster consisted of 52 meteors observed over 8.5 seconds.
The meteors' properties matched those of tau-Herculids, confirming shower membership.
The cluster is likely less than 2.5 days old, suggesting thermal stress-induced disintegration.
Abstract
To date only very few meteor clusters have been instrumentally recorded. This means that every new detection is an important contribution to the understanding of these phenomena, which are thought to be evidence of the meteoroid fragmentation in the Solar System. On 31 May 2022, at 6:48:55 UT, a cluster consisting of 52 meteors was detected within 8.5 seconds during a predicted outburst of the tau-Herculid meteor shower. The aim of this paper is to reconstruct the atmospheric trajectories of the meteors and use the collected information to deduce the origin of the cluster. The meteors were recorded by two video cameras during an airborne campaign. Due to only the single station observation, their trajectories were estimated under the assumption that they belonged to the meteor shower. The mutual positions of the fragments, together with their photometric masses, was used to model the…
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