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Old 06-22-12, 11:19 AM   #4
TLAM Strike
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Join Date: Apr 2002
Location: Rochester, New York
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Oberon View Post
Entirely possible that a meteorite caused the wildfire in the first place, you never know...


Quote:
many people think that a meteorite, after it hits the ground, is very hot and glows red. Actually, meteorites found shortly after impact tend to be warm, but not hot at all! It turns out that it certainly is hot enough to glow while it is in the part of the atmosphere that decelerates it the strongest, but any part that actually melts will be blown off ("ablated") by the wind of its passage. That leaves only the warm part.
From: http://www.badastronomy.com/bad/misc/meteoric.html

Actually since that rock just spent the last few billion years near absolute zero its more likely to be burning cold than burning hot when it hits the ground. If its warm its going to be like a shirt that came out of a dryer or your microwave burrito. If it caused a fire its probably because it hit something man made, like a power transformer.
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