Technical Summary of Lunar Impacts of 1999 November 18
A summary of the six confirmed lunar impacts is given in the table below. This is an ASCII plain text table that must be viewed with a fixed-space font such as Courier for the columns to line up properly. We are naming these with letters in the order of discovery. The UT date is 1999 November 18. In each case, the events were confirmed on my videotapes made at George Varros' backyard in Mount Airy, Maryland, and the timings are from my tapes. The early-reported estimates of the locations of D and E were rather far off in longitude, according to measurements of the video images made by Ben Wun and me on December 8.
Accuracy, Approx. Discovered Selenographic Name UTC sec. Mag1 Mag2 by Long. Lat. Description h m s F 3:05:44.89 0.02 5 9? David Palmer 65W 40N 180km se of Harding D 3:49:40.40 0.02 3 7 David Palmer 68W 3N w. wall of Hevelius E 4:08:04.10 0.03 5 8 David Palmer 78W 15S 140km SW of Rocca A 4:46:15.52 0.05 3 8 Brian Cudnik 71W 14N 30km NE of Cardanus B 5:14:12.92 0.02 7 8 Pedro Sada 58W 12N 150km E of Galilaei C 5:15:20.22 0.02 4 7 Pedro Sada 58W 20N 100km S SchiaparelliMag1 is the approximate magnitude of the flash estimated from my tape on the half-frame on which it first appears. Mag2 is the estimated magnitude a half-frame, or 1/60th second, later. In all cases I can't see any evidence of the flash in the half-frame 1/30th second after the first one, except for D, where it seems to appear there at about 9th mag. The selenographic locations should be accurate to within 1 deg. or 30 km. Their locations were recently improved by using a grid overlay. All of these are in the western part of Oceanus Procellarum (Ocean of Storms) except D and E, which are in highlands area a short distance west of the western shore of Oceanus Procellarum. The times have been determined by Don Stockbauer, Victoria, Texas, after creating an accurately time- inserted copy using an IOTA-Manly video time inserter.
Observer Information West Telescope Name Location Long. Lat. Aper. Recording B. Cudnik Columbus, TX 96.664 29.618 36cm Audio tape (vis.) D. Dunham Mount Airy, MD 77.206 39.342 13cm PC-23C videocam R. Frankenberger San Antonio, TX 98.653 29.486 20cm PC-23C videocam D. Palmer Greenbelt, MD 76.859 38.988 13cm PC-23C videocam P. Sada Monterrey, Mex. 100.143 25.915 20cm PC-23C videocam Observer Contact Information Name Institution E-mail Brian Cudnik Prairie View A&M Univ. cudnik@cps.pvsci.pvamu.edu David W. Dunham JHU - Applied Phys. Lab. dunham@erols.com Rick Frankenberger Univ. Tex., San Antonio rickf@stic.net David M. Palmer Goddard Space Flt. Ctr. David.M.Palmer.1@gsfc.nasa.gov Pedro Valdes Sada Universidad de Monterrey psada@ix.netcom.comD seems to be the brightest impact. Besides Palmer's and my videotapes, it is also in videotapes by Pedro Sada and by Rick Frankenberger in San Antonio, Texas. My image for the event also shows three stars, from north to south (right to left in the image) being 7.6- mag. SAO 146577, 8.2-mag. SAO 146578, and 8.9-mag. SAO 146574, all of whose occultations were recorded a few minutes later. The first two stars are also visible in David Palmer's frame of the D impact. Some of Palmer's images are on the IOTA Web site at http://www.lunar-occultations.com/iotaSada reports two more events estimated at about 5th magnitude at 4:32:50.8 and 4:34:49.7 UTC, but they have not been found in other tapes (the field of view of my 5-inch telescope used for the 6 known events was aimed at a more southern part of the Moon than usual, so they would have been missed if they occurred a little north of the equator). The 2nd event was fairly close to the terminator. Other possible unconfirmed events (some chance of their being videotape defects) were recorded by me at 4:50:15.9 UTC and by David Palmer at 2:42:02.
Jay Melosh, at the University of Arizona's Lunar and Planetary Laboratory, calculates that the mass of the impacting meteoroids ranged from several tens of kilograms to a few hundred kilograms (hundreds of pounds) and that they were about half a meter (or one to two feet) in diameter. The resulting craters are probably 10 to 15 meters (30 to 50 feet) in diameter. However, such large bodies in the Leonid meteor streams are thought to be significantly rarer than the new lunar observations imply. Mark Matney, of Lockheed Martin Space Operations in the Orbital Debris Program Office at NASA Johnson Space Flight Center notes that much more energy was converted into light than expected from standard theories during artificial satellite collision tests. Matney believes that hypervelocity collisions may produce some non-equilibrium phenomena that produced the extra light. So the meteoroids causing the observed lunar impacts may be ten to a hundred times smaller than Melosh indicates, making them more compatible with the expected Leonid stream distribution. Although certainly not visible from the Earth, the new craters might be found by comparing new images that will be obtained by the Japanese Selene spacecraft, scheduled for launch in 2003, with Apollo or Lunar Orbiter photoes taken about thirty years ago.
Sunglints, caused by sunlight briefly shining off of artificial satelites or space debris, have been proposed as a possible explanation of the flash observations. This is very unlikely since the observations were made late at night local time when most orbiting space objects were deep in the Earth's shadow. Also, with six flashes simultaneously recorded at two or more separated locations, the chances are much greater that the flashes are lunar phenomena than something closer. In the cases where lunar location information is available in the separate video records, there is also good agreement.
David Dunham, IOTA, 1999 December 3; revised, December 13