Flux of very faint leonid meteors observed with a 3 m liquid mirror telescope intensified CCD system

Astronomy and Astrophysics – Astronomy

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Scientific paper

We have used a 3.0 m diameter liquid mirror telescope (LMT) coupled to a microchannel plate (MCP) image intensified charge coupled device (CCD) detector to study the 1999 Leonid meteor shower. This is the largest aperture optical instrument ever utilized for meteor detection. While the observing system is sensitive down to stars of +18 astronomical magnitude under optimum conditions, when corrections for meteor motion are applied the majority of the meteors collected fall in the absolute magnitude range from +5 to +10, corresponding to photometric masses from about 10-7 to 10-9 kg. This is largely due to the fact that the field of view of the LMT was only 0.28 degrees, so that only a small portion of the luminous meteor trail was recorded. While the flux of these small (1.4x10-9 kg ) Leonid meteors is low (of the order of 1 Leonid per hour per square kilometer perpendicular to the Leonid), we do have clear evidence that the Leonid stream contains particles in the mass range studied here. The data showed a possibly significant peak in Leonid flux (9.3 +/- 3.5) for the one hour period from 11:00 to 12:00 UT Nov. 17 1999 (solar longitude 234.653 to 234.695, epoch 2000.0), although the main trend of these results is a broad low level Leonid activity. There is evidence that small meteoroids are more widely distributed in the Leonid stream, as would be expected from cometary ejection stream models. As would be expected from an extrapolation of mass distribution indices for brighter meteors, the vast majority of meteors at this size are sporadic. The LMT is a powerful detector of sporadic meteors, with an average non-Leonid detection rate of more than 140 meteor events per hour.

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