(meteorobs) Possibility of Electrostatic meteor detection.

Swift, Wesley R. (MSFC-NNM05AB50C)[RAYTHEON] Wesley.Swift at nasa.gov
Fri Apr 13 15:40:21 EDT 2007


Some description of or reference to your "moving charge Detector"  would
be useful.  How is it made?

Wes


-----Original Message-----
From: meteorobs-bounces at meteorobs.org
[mailto:meteorobs-bounces at meteorobs.org] On Behalf Of
stange34 at sbcglobal.net
Sent: Friday, April 13, 2007 12:37 PM
To: meteorobs at meteorobs.org
Subject: (meteorobs) Possibility of Electrostatic meteor detection. 

A growing suspicion exists that common fast meteors are causing
momentary pulses or interuptions in the late night local electrostatic
field.

Not confirmed yet by other instrumentation,  there is a very high
incidence of recorded pulses coming from the Moving Charge Detector in
the early morning hours at this location.

By midnight the atmospheric layers and electrostatic fields have "risen"
and are very stable. Pulses are widely spaced and random. During the
day, lower atmospheric layers are formed by the sun and atmospheric
charge activity appears to be far to active to isolate any pulse to
meteors.

I am noticing the late night pulses correspond to what I "THINK" I see
on a 12 inch composite monitor which is separate & isollated from the
electrophonic computer system or its instrumentation. It is a secondary
monitor for just viewing the sky.

This composite monitor covers the whole sky and any  meteors are
extremely fast, faint, and nearly unobservable. But when I "think" I see
what could have been a meteor or a flash of light.... then look at the
data logger on the computer, it is forming a pulse.

There is a delay between the data logger and the flash of momentary
light or faint streak(?), which is because the data logger samples the
data 100 times per second before it presents the 4 channel sequenced
data as a pulse from any one channel.

It looks promising enough for me to build a second Moving Charge
Detector and monitor it on a real-time fast response Oscilloscope with
periphery view as I stare at the 12" composite monitor. 

I think it could REALLY be beneficial if an independant person could
make a Moving Charge Detector and connect to a portable(?) Oscilloscope
or computer data logger and actually view late night meteors outdoors
while noting any pulses on their instrumentation. 

I am suspicios of these results at this point and it needs an
independant study. Thankyou.

Larry
YC Sentinel
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