FACTOID # 137: Sick people is Switzerland stay in hospital for longer than the people of any other nation - almost 10 days, on average. Switzerland also has the world's highest number of hospital beds per capita.
 
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Encyclopedia > Micrometeorite

A Micrometeoroid (also micrometeorite, micrometeor) is a tiny meteoroid; a small particle of rock from space, usually weighing less than a gram, that poses a threat to space exploration. The risk is especially high for objects in space for long periods of time, such as satellites. They also pose major engineering challenges in theoretical low-cost lift systems such as rotavators, space elevators, and orbital airships.


Micrometeoroids are extremely common in space, particularly near the Earth. Their velocities relative to a spacecraft in orbit can be on the order of kilometers per second, and resistance to micrometeoroid impact is a significant design challenge for spacecraft designers.


Micrometeoroids are typically small, typically metallic, pieces of rock broken off from larger chunks of rock and debris. They typically date back to the formation of the solar system. Since orbital velocities are so high, and since they can enter an earth orbit from any angle, micrometeoroids in earth orbit constantly intercept the orbits of spacecraft and impact them at high speed. While their tiny size limits the damage incurred, the high velocity constantly degrades the outer casing of spacecraft and, in the long term, can threaten the functionality of systems.


Micrometeoroids can also be easily found on earth in places where rainwater can concentrate them (such as a drain spout of roof gutters). Since metallic dust occurs relatively rarely on earth from other sources, metallic micrometeoroids can typically be separated from Earth dust via a strong magnet. Micrometeoroids comprise most of the 30,000 tons of space debris that are deposited on Earth every year.


Impacts by small objects with extremely high velocity are a current area of research in terminal ballistics. Accelerating objects up to such velocities is difficult; current techiques include linear motors and shaped charges.


In order to understand the micrometeoroid population better, a number of spacecraft (including Lunar Orbiter 1, Luna 3 and Mars 1) include micrometeoroid detectors.


  Results from FactBites:
 
The Citizen Scientist - Society for Amateur Scientists (807 words)
Micrometeorites (1) are incredibly small bits of iron or nickel-iron of four general shapes: rounded rod, raindrop, sphere or pear as seen in Fig.
Micrometeorites are formed when material from space is violently incinerated in the upper atmosphere (~100 km altitude) to become meteor debris (2).
Micrometeorites deposited on a roof will be dislodged by rain or melting snow and will find their way to the gutter system, where the runoff water is collected in plastic buckets placed beneath one or more drain spouts.
Documentation: Micrometeorites from the South Pole Water Well (S. Taylor) (793 words)
Micrometeorites dated between 1100 A.D. to 1500 A.D. were collected from the bottom of the South Pole Water Well in December 1995.
Micrometeorites are extraterrestrial particles, generally less than 1 mm, that have survived atmospheric entry.
Micrometeorites form a lag deposit on the well bottom as they are melted out of the ice during continuous drilling of the well.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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