The Winchcombe fireball—That lucky survivor

On February 28, 2021, a fireball dropped ∼0.6 kg of recovered CM2 carbonaceous chondrite meteorites in South-West England near the town of Winchcombe. We reconstruct the fireball's atmospheric trajectory, light curve, fragmentation behavior, and pre-atmospheric orbit from optical records contri...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: McMullan, S., Vida, D., Devillepoix, Hadrien, Rowe, J., Daly, L., King, A. J., Cupak, Martin, Howie, Robert, Sansom, Ellie, Shober, P., Towner, Martin, Anderson, S., McFadden, L., Horak, J., Smedley, A.R.D., Joy, K.H., Shuttleworth, A., Colas, F., Zanda, B., O'Brien, A.C., McMullan, I., Shaw, C., Suttle, A., Suttle, M.D., Young, J.S., Campbell-Burns, P., Kacerek, R., Bassom, R., Bosley, S., Fleet, R., Jones, D., McIntyre, M., James, N., Robson, D., Dickinson, P., Bland, Phil, Collins, G.S.
Format: Journal Article
Published: Wiley-Blackwell 2023
Online Access:http://purl.org/au-research/grants/arc/DP170102529
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/94724
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Summary:On February 28, 2021, a fireball dropped ∼0.6 kg of recovered CM2 carbonaceous chondrite meteorites in South-West England near the town of Winchcombe. We reconstruct the fireball's atmospheric trajectory, light curve, fragmentation behavior, and pre-atmospheric orbit from optical records contributed by five networks. The progenitor meteoroid was three orders of magnitude less massive (∼13 kg) than any previously observed carbonaceous fall. The Winchcombe meteorite survived entry because it was exposed to a very low peak atmospheric dynamic pressure (∼0.6 MPa) due to a fortuitous combination of entry parameters, notably low velocity (13.9 km s−1). A near-catastrophic fragmentation at ∼0.07 MPa points to the body's fragility. Low entry speeds which cause low peak dynamic pressures are likely necessary conditions for a small carbonaceous meteoroid to survive atmospheric entry, strongly constraining the radiant direction to the general antapex direction. Orbital integrations show that the meteoroid was injected into the near-Earth region ∼0.08 Myr ago and it never had a perihelion distance smaller than ∼0.7 AU, while other CM2 meteorites with known orbits approached the Sun closer (∼0.5 AU) and were heated to at least 100 K higher temperatures.