[meteorite-list] Cu Meteorite

Ralph A. Croning rcroning at mts.net
Sun Jul 13 16:26:32 EDT 2008


Hi All,

Besides the metal content of a meteorite we also have to consider the
optical emission of ionized gases around a meteor/bolide as a source of its
colour. Oxygen molecules will glow blue/green when excited (ionized) and
nitrogen, red. The oxygen is stated as blue/green because of people's
colour perception. To some it will apprear blue and to others, green. Hope
this helps.

Cheers,

Ralph A. Croning
IMCA#4326






>----------------------------------------------------------------------

>

>Message: 1

>Date: Sat, 12 Jul 2008 23:09:41 -0700

>From: "Mark Bowling" <minador at yahoo.com>

>Subject: Re: [meteorite-list] Re Cu meteorite

>To: <meteorite-list at meteoritecentral.com>

>Message-ID: <0f3701c8e4af$0abce360$2036aa20$@com>

>Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"

>

>I've seen a few green fireballs/bolides over the years. The flame test of

>copper is green so I've always wondered about this subject myself. Geologic

>processes have produced relatively huge masses of copper in the earth, and I

>don't see why that cannot occur elsewhere in the solar system. But I'm just

>a biased copper miner... ;-) Something like that would be quite rare, but

>possible I think.

>

>Clear skies!

>

>--

>Mark B.

>Vail, AZ

>IMCA #6645 o(:-)




More information about the Meteorite-list mailing list