High-speed imaging of four lunar impact flashes reveals lower variance in initial intensity than total energy and no correlation between them, suggesting decoupled vapor and ejecta phases.
, author Assink, J.D
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Analysis of 623 bolides finds 50% infrasound detection rate controlled primarily by entry angle rather than energy, with steeper and lower-altitude events more detectable.
citing papers explorer
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High-Speed Observations of Lunar Impact Flashes
High-speed imaging of four lunar impact flashes reveals lower variance in initial intensity than total energy and no correlation between them, suggesting decoupled vapor and ejecta phases.
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The Role of Source Geometry and Atmospheric Propagation in Global Bolide Infrasound Detectability
Analysis of 623 bolides finds 50% infrasound detection rate controlled primarily by entry angle rather than energy, with steeper and lower-altitude events more detectable.