biddie67 wrote:rain drop's surface tension
I think biddie67 is on the right on track with the surface tension of the water. If the incoming particle doesn't have large enough momentum it would bounce off the water droplet instead of breaking into it. This is not the case for snowflakes the particles can get logged into the crevasses of the structure.
Amir wrote:don't we have enough regular size Meteorites to study?
I am quite thankful that someone asked this question, far to often researchers will become encapsulated in the work (like how to collect only large particles) and lose touch with why the research was important in the first place.
So as to why micrometeorites are important. Well to most people on the street micrometeorites do not affect there life what so ever (but thats the way it goes with most space related research). In taking a step back you can see these little particles are vital to everyone. Space is full of cosmic dust and when to much is collected in one place, they start to build on each other. The collected dust or dust cloud acts as a radiator cooling the center and radiating the thermal energy out. Until the center is around 3 Kelvin, with everything moving slower the gases and the dust particles start sticking together. Coagulation continues on and on, until in the center a sun is formed and the larger dust particles start to orbit. These orbiting particles group together and forming planets, asteroid belts, comets, and such. But not all the particles are collected on these bodies they continue to float around in space. These left over particles slow rain down onto the planets, and we call them micrometeorites. (I tried to make it an simple explanation so i may have miss some steps or made some errors but if you want more info search cosmic dust/early solar system or read the first few chapters of 'the secret life of dust' by hanna holmes.)
So some micrometeorites are reanimates from the early solar system, but they also come down from comets, meteor-showers, (other large interplanetary objects)
The micrometeorites from the larger bodies have compositions similar to the parent body, which is different than the composition of the early cosmic dust. So the solar-dust micrometeorites give more information about the early solar system, when compared to regular size (>1mm) meteorites. Now how do we determine where the meteorites came from (cosmic dust or comets), I don't know of the top of my head but probably by comparing there compositions to regular size meteorites.
There are probably some other reasons for studying micrometeorites but i think i addressed one of the main ones.
Now on to the Good news, this Friday is our appointment with the electron microscope. So will be getting some better images and the elemental compositions of the particles. below are links of the particles we are taking. (note some of the particles on the first link were broken and/or were unable to mount for the microscope)
https://docs.google.com/fileview?id=0B7 ... MzA1&hl=en
https://docs.google.com/fileview?id=0B7 ... OTdm&hl=en
so everyone can look forward to Friday afternoon for a posting of the results.
cheers
Gorkow