PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Discovery of the Benešov meteorites 20 years after the bolide event

2014-10-14
(Press-News.org) Astronomy & Astrophysics is publishing the spectacular discovery of meteorite fragments 20 years after the corresponding bolide was seen in the skies of the Czech Republic. This discovery was made possible by reanalyzing the trajectory, which moved the impact line by 330 meters. Interestingly, the meteorites found on the ground are of different types, pointing to a parent asteroid of heterogeneous composition.

Collisions of meter-sized meteoroids with the Earth's atmosphere are relatively rare, occurring about 40 times a year. They cause very spectacular events, known as superbolides. One of the best known such events, the Benešov bolide, occurred on 7 May 1991 at 23h 03m 46s UT over the Czech Republic. It was recorded during systematic photographic observations by the European Fireball Network and certainly ended in a multiple meteorite fall, but no meteorite was found in the weeks and years after the fall, despite many attempts.

In February 2011, nearly 20 years after the event, P. Spurný and his colleagues [1] measured the records again and analyzed the data with improved methods. This led to a new picture of the whole event with a revised atmospheric trajectory and a new impact location. This allowed the team to recover the Benešov meteorites, 20 years after the fall, exactly in the newly predicted area. It is the first time a meteorite is found so long after the bolide observation. The team found four small, highly-weathered meteorites with a total mass of 12 g. The probability that these four fragments come from different meteoroids and were found by chance at the same place is estimated to be 1 in 100,000 or less. Even more interestingly, these four meteorites are of three different mineralogical types. This means that the Benešov meteoroid was heterogeneous and contained at least three different types of material. After the Almahata Sitta fall, this is the second time that such a heterogeneous composition has been found. It raises the possibility that a significant fraction of all asteroids are heterogeneous and that they were strongly reprocessed by collisions with other asteroids in the main belt.

INFORMATION: [1] The team includes P. Spurný, J. Haloda, J. Borovička, L. Shrbený, and P. Halodová.

Based on the article "Reanalysis of the Benešov bolide and recovery of polymict breccia meteorites - old mystery solved after 20 years", by Spurný et al. Published in Astronomy & Astrophysics, 2014, 570, A39


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Unique catalysts for hydrogen fuel cells synthesized in ordinary kitchen microwave oven

Unique catalysts for hydrogen fuel cells synthesized in ordinary kitchen microwave oven
2014-10-14
Swedish and Chinese researchers show how a unique nano-alloy composed of palladium nano-islands embedded in tungsten nanoparticles creates a new type of catalysts for highly efficient oxygen reduction, the most important reaction in hydrogen fuel cells. Their results are published in the scientific journal Nature Communications. The world's rapidly growing demand for energy and the requirement of sustainable energy production calls for an urgent change in today's fossil fuel based energy system. Research groups worldwide work intensively to develop novel advanced energy ...

Fires dot the Ukraine countryside

Fires dot the Ukraine countryside
2014-10-14
Numerous fires (marked with red dots) are burning in the Ukraine, likely as a result of regional agricultural practices. The body of water at the lower left of this true-color Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) image is the Sea of Azov. The Sea is bordered by Ukraine to the northwest, west and southwest and by Russia to the northeast, east, and southeast. To its left is the Black Sea. The location, widespread nature, and number of fires suggest that these fires were deliberately set to manage land. Farmers often use fire to return nutrients to the soil ...

Prescribed burns in Western Australia

Prescribed burns in Western Australia
2014-10-14
The Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) on NASA's Aqua satellite detected fires burning in Western Australia on October 14, 2014. Matching these hot spots up to the the prescribed fire burns on Western Australia's parks and wildlife site: http://www.dpaw.wa.gov.au/management/fire/prescribed-burning/burns these fires are most likely prescribed burns used to limit bushfire outbreaks. According to the Government of Australia's Department of Parks and Wildlife, "Prescribed burning is the process of planning and applying fire to a predetermined area, under ...

Early detection window when pancreatic cancer is in the family

2014-10-14
Pancreatic cancer likely takes between 10 and 20 years to develop, providing the potential for a very "broad window" of intervention if detected early, which may be possible for people who inherit a predisposition, say Australian clinical researchers. Dr Jeremy Humphris and Professor Andrew Biankin1, from Sydney's Garvan Institute of Medical Research, analysed medical histories and tumour samples taken from a cohort of 766 pancreatic cancer patients, operated on between 1994 and 20122. Roughly 9% of these patients had a first-degree relative (parent or sibling) with ...

Seniors run for the suburbs in their golden years

2014-10-14
Montreal, October 14, 2014 — By 2040, there will be more than three times the number of Americans aged 80+ than there were in 2000. Condo towers crowding city skylines seem to reflect builders' hopes that the grey set will head to urban centres for increased services and better transit options. But new research from Concordia University suggests that the opposite is more likely to occur. In a study recently published in the Journal of Transport Geography, researcher Zachary Patterson uses census data to map seniors' moving habits. What emerges is a clear pattern: ...

NASA's Aqua satellite sees Extra-Tropical Storm Vongfong pulling away from Hokkaido, Japan

NASAs Aqua satellite sees Extra-Tropical Storm Vongfong pulling away from Hokkaido, Japan
2014-10-14
NASA's Aqua satellite passed over Extra-Tropical Storm Vongfong on Oct. 4 as it was moving away from Hokkaido, Japan, the northernmost of the big islands. Vongfong transitioned into an extra-tropical storm early on Oct. 4 as its core changed from warm to cold. The MODIS or Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer instrument aboard NASA's Aqua satellite captured a visible image of Tropical Storm Vongfong over Japan on Oct. 14 at 03:15 UTC as it was southeast of the island of Hokkaido, Japan. The image showed that south of the center of circulation was almost devoid ...

Future computers could be built from magnetic 'tornadoes'

2014-10-14
Magnetic materials form the basis of most hard disc drives as they are able to store data. A team from the University of Sheffield's Faculty of Engineering have been investigating whether they could also be used to perform calculations, and so take on the role of a computer's central processing unit (CPU). Lead researcher, Dr Tom Hayward, explains: "Magnetic materials are useful for data storage because they can retain information without consuming energy. A computer built around a CPU made of magnetic materials should be much more power efficient than existing technologies, ...

Institutional rearing may increase risk attention-deficit disorder

2014-10-14
Philadelphia, PA, October 14, 2014 – Over the past decades, we have seen numerous tragic examples where the failure of institutions to meet the needs of infants for social contact and stimulation has led to the failure of these infants to thrive. Infancy and childhood are critical life periods that shape the development of the cortex. A generation of research suggests that enriched environments, full of interesting stimuli to explore, promote cortical development and cognitive function. In contrast, deprivation and stress may compromise cortical development and ...

New discovery will enhance yield and quality of cereal and bioenergy crops

New discovery will enhance yield and quality of cereal and bioenergy crops
2014-10-14
ST. LOUIS, MO – October 13, 2014 –A team of scientists led by Thomas Brutnell, Ph.D., director of the Enterprise Rent-A-Car Institute for Renewable Fuels at the Donald Danforth Plant Science Center have developed a new way of identifying genes that are important for photosynthesis in maize, and in rice. Their research helps to prioritize candidate genes that can be used for crop improvement and revealed new pathways and information about how plants fix carbon. The findings, published in "Comparative analyses of C4 and C3 photosynthesis in developing leaves of ...

Scientists link ALS progression to increased protein instability

Scientists link ALS progression to increased protein instability
2014-10-14
LA JOLLA, CA—October 13, 2014—A new study by scientists from The Scripps Research Institute (TSRI), Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (Berkeley Lab) and other institutions suggests a cause of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), also known as Lou Gehrig's disease. "Our work supports a common theme whereby loss of protein stability leads to disease," said John A. Tainer, professor of structural biology at TSRI and senior scientist at Berkeley Lab, who shared senior authorship of the new research with TSRI Professor Elizabeth Getzoff. Getzoff, Tainer and ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Africa acacias ‘go for broke’ to grow, use up water to survive drought

An app, an Apple Watch and AI: UMass Amherst creates a new way for researchers to study sleep health

Sharing positive emotions with a partner is good for health

Ergonomic insect headgear and abdominal buckle with surface stimulators manufactured via multimaterial 3D printing snap-and-secure installation of noninvasive sensory stimulators for cyborg insects

Pharmacological insights into Scleromitrion diffusum (Willd.) against gastric cancer: active components and mechanistic pathways

Advanced imaging strategies based on intelligent micro/nanomotors

How climate-damaging nitrous oxide forms in the ocean

N6-methyladenosine methylation emerges as a key target for treating acute lung injury

Distributor-type membrane reactor for carbon dioxide methanation

Mapping the missing green: An AI framework boosts urban greening in Tokyo

Pharmacists help cancer patients manage high blood sugar more effectively

Babies’ gut bacteria may influence future emotional health

Scientists create new type of semiconductor that holds superconducting promise

Genes associated with obesity shared across ancestries, researchers find

Antidepressants improve core depressive symptoms early on

Superconducting germanium made with industry-compatible methods

Synthetic biology to supercharge photosynthesis in crops

Soil ‘memory’ can help plants respond to drought

Illinois researchers convert food waste into jet fuel, boosting circular economy

Under embargo: We learn physical skills by feeling rewarded, even in the absence of a reward, finds new study

Scientists on ‘urgent’ quest to explain consciousness as AI gathers pace

Drones reveal unexpectedly high emissions from wastewater treatment plants

Dancing alleviated perceived symptoms of depression and helped to understand its root causes

Tricky treats: Why pumpkins accumulate pollutants

Revealing the molecular structures of sugars using galectin-10 protein crystals

World’s leading medical journal details the climate emergency

GLP-1 drugs effective for weight loss, but more independent studies needed

Researchers uncover previously unexplored details of mosquito’s specialized detection mechanisms

Stem cell therapy linked to lower risk of heart failure after a heart attack

The NHS is reaching a crisis point in consultant recruitment, new report warns

[Press-News.org] Discovery of the Benešov meteorites 20 years after the bolide event