(meteorobs) Forgotten research on meteors - maybe it is time to reconsider?

drobnock drobnock at penn.com
Thu May 21 15:06:54 EDT 2015


Popular Science Monthly, October 1886 carried an article by Hubert A.
Newton (Yale College) about Meteorites, Meteors, and Shooting Stars p
733-. Within the discussion was the popular notion that meteorites and
meteors were from the eruption of terrestrial volcanoes. The meteorites
found lying on the ground ere either from local volcanic eruptions or
from an eruption from halfway around the world.   Magazine of Natural
History, Volume 6, 1833 discussed similar views.

If the concept of an antimatter meteor exist, and if thunderstorms of
sufficient magnitude create antimatter burst, why could not the detected
antimatter meteor or the concept of such meteors be the result of strong
thunder/lightning storms casting antimatter into the atmosphere, and it
return to earth as a meteor?

George John Drobnock

Thoughts from 2011 posting by Society of Amateur Radio Astronomers ›
Thunderstorms Hurling Antimatter into Space
https://groups.google.com/forum/#!topic/sara-list/9UNLBcOk7Cg



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