Aerodynamic Analysis of Tektites and Their Parent Bodies

Aerodynamic Analysis of Tektites and Their Parent Bodies
Author: E. W. Adams
Publisher:
Total Pages: 52
Release: 1962
Genre: Aerodynamics
ISBN:

Experiment and analysis indicate that the button-type australites were derived from glassy spheres which entered or re-entered the atmosphere as cold solid bodies; in case of average-size specimens, the entry direction was nearly horizontal and the entry speed between 6.5 and 11.2 km/sec. Terrestrial origin of such spheres is impossible because of extremely high deceleration rates at low altitudes. The limited extension of the strewn fields rules out extraterrestrial origin of clusters of such spheres because of stability considerations for clusters in space. However, tektites may have been released as liquid droplets from glassy parent bodies ablating in the atmosphere of the earth. The australites then have skipped together with the parent body in order to re-enter as cold spheres. Terrestrial origin of a parent body would require an extremely violent natural event. Ablation analysis shows that fusion of opaque siliceous stone into glass by aerodynamic heating is impossible.

Aerodynamic Evidence Pertaining to the Entry of Tektites Into the Earth's Atmosphere

Aerodynamic Evidence Pertaining to the Entry of Tektites Into the Earth's Atmosphere
Author: Dean R. Chapman
Publisher:
Total Pages: 36
Release: 1962
Genre: Ablation (Aerothermodynamics)
ISBN:

Evidence is presented which shows that the Australian and Java tektites entered the earth's atmosphere and experienced ablation by severe aerodynamic heating in hypervelocity flight. The laboratory experiments on hypervelocity ablation have reproduced ring-wave flow ridges and coiled circumferential flanges like those found on certain of these tektites. Systematic striae distortions exhibited in a thin layer beneath the front surface of australites also are reproduced in the laboratory ablation experiments, and are shown to correspond to the calculated distortions for aerodynamic ablation of a glass. About 98 percent of Australian tektites represent aerodynamically stable configurations during the ablative portion of an entry trajectory. Certain meteorites exhibit surface features similar to those on tektites.

Advances in Geophysics

Advances in Geophysics
Author:
Publisher: Academic Press
Total Pages: 362
Release: 1965-01-01
Genre: Science
ISBN: 0080568394

Advances in Geophysics