by Chris Peterson » Fri Feb 08, 2008 6:45 pm
iamlucky13 wrote:First of all, can anybody explain what this means?
Here's my interpretation: meteor streams vary in the stability of their orbits. That is, some streams are more influenced by gravitational perturbations than others. Also, some streams are more like a single stream, while others consist of many individual strands. The Quadrantid debris stream appears to be stable in time, meaning we encounter it in a very predictable way from year to year. That is quite different from the issue of how homogeneous the debris is along the orbit. In this case, material is clumped unevenly, so depending on what part of the orbit crosses the Earth's path, you may have just a few meteors or very strong activity.
Put slightly differently, the
orbit is very stable, but the
debris distribution is variable.
[quote="iamlucky13"]First of all, can anybody explain what this means?
[quote][url=http://quadrantid.seti.org/]Preliminary indications[/url] are that the meteor stream is quite stable in time but variable in meteor abundance. [/quote][/quote]
Here's my interpretation: meteor streams vary in the stability of their orbits. That is, some streams are more influenced by gravitational perturbations than others. Also, some streams are more like a single stream, while others consist of many individual strands. The Quadrantid debris stream appears to be stable in time, meaning we encounter it in a very predictable way from year to year. That is quite different from the issue of how homogeneous the debris is along the orbit. In this case, material is clumped unevenly, so depending on what part of the orbit crosses the Earth's path, you may have just a few meteors or very strong activity.
Put slightly differently, the [i]orbit[/i] is very stable, but the [i]debris distribution[/i] is variable.