Difference between revisions of "Meteor"

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(Meteors are not really studied as weather)
(more about the object, less about people)
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A '''meteor''' is a kind of stone that falls from the [[sky]].
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A '''meteor''' is small rocky object that comes from space and falls through the sky (a "fireball"). If a meteor hits the ground, it becomes known as a ''[[meteorite]]''.  
 
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Strictly speaking, "meteors" are stones that are falling through the sky (aka "fireballs"). If a meteor hits the ground, it becomes known as a ''[[meteorite]]'' However, not many people bother to make this technical distinction.  
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If a meteor enters Earth's atmosphere, it is often referred to as a "shooting star" or "falling star".
 
If a meteor enters Earth's atmosphere, it is often referred to as a "shooting star" or "falling star".

Revision as of 14:02, February 19, 2013

A meteor is small rocky object that comes from space and falls through the sky (a "fireball"). If a meteor hits the ground, it becomes known as a meteorite.

If a meteor enters Earth's atmosphere, it is often referred to as a "shooting star" or "falling star".

A major source of meteors lies between Mars and Jupiter, an enormous cluster of meteors also known as the asteroid belt (or Kuiper Belt). Other (minor) meteor belts and clouds exist, when the Earth passes through them periodic meteor showers occur, such as the Perseiids, Geminids, and Taurids.

Earth's orbit is far inside the belt between between Mars and Jupiter; another lies just outside of our solar system. Meteoroids from those belts break free and may collide with Earth.

There are currently several hundred known asteroids, called Apollo asteroids, that are in Earth-crossing orbits.

Culture and History

The ancient Greeks believed that the stones were Zeus's thunderbolts. A famous quote by Thomas Jefferson:

"I would sooner believe that two Yankee professors lied, than that stones fell from the sky."[1]