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  2. Cameras for All-Sky Meteor Surveillance - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cameras_for_All-Sky_Meteor...

    CAMS [3] networks around the world use an array of low-light video surveillance cameras to collect astrometric tracks and brightness profiles of meteors in the night sky. . Triangulation of those tracks results in the meteor's direction and speed, from which the meteors’ orbit in space is calculated and the material's parent body can be identifi

  3. List of free geology software - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_free_geology_software

    This is a list of free and open-source software for geological data handling and interpretation. The list is split into broad categories, depending on the intended use of the software and its scope of functionality. Notice that 'free and open-source' requires that the source code is available and users are given a free software license.

  4. Desert Fireball Network - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Desert_Fireball_Network

    The Desert Fireball Network (DFN) is a network of cameras in Australia.It is designed to track meteoroids entering the atmosphere, and aid in recovering meteorites.It currently operates 50 autonomous cameras, spread across Western and South Australia, including Nullarbor plain, WA wheatbelt, and South Australian desert, covering an area of 2.5 million km 2.

  5. British and Irish Meteorite Society - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/British_and_Irish...

    The group provides a meteorite collecting and study focus for the UK and Ireland, and is the only meteorite group in the UK and one of only three in the entire world. Members have made many major scientific discoveries, including the finding of a rare 17.6 kilograms (39 lb) pallasite meteorite, in Hambleton, Yorkshire , in 2005.

  6. Buseck Center for Meteorite Studies - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Buseck_Center_for...

    The Buseck Center for Meteorite Studies was founded in 1960, on the Tempe Campus of Arizona State University, and houses the world's largest university-based meteorite collection. The collection contains specimens from over 1,600 separate meteorite falls and finds, and is actively used internationally for planetary, geological and space science ...

  7. Sentry (monitoring system) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sentry_(monitoring_system)

    About 99% of the objects on the risk table are less than roughly 140 meters in diameter. Roughly 1,200 of these risk-listed near-Earth asteroids are estimated to be about the size of the Chelyabinsk meteor (H>26), which killed no one but had 1,491 non-direct injuries; or smaller. More than 3,140 asteroids have been removed from the risk table ...

  8. Startling find in meteorite that fell in UK - AOL

    www.aol.com/extra-terrestrial-water-found-first...

    The Winchcombe meteorite, which crashed into a driveway in the Gloucestershire town last February, is also thought to hold clues about where the water in the Earth’s vast oceans came from.

  9. NEODyS - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NEODyS

    NEODyS [1] (Near Earth Objects Dynamic Site) is an Italian service that provides information on near-Earth objects with a Web-based interface. It is based on a continually and (almost) automatically maintained database of near earth asteroid orbits. This site provides a number of services to the NEO community.