17

Leonid Meteor Shower – every November

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Page 1: Leonid Meteor Shower – every November
Page 2: Leonid Meteor Shower – every November
Page 3: Leonid Meteor Shower – every November
Page 4: Leonid Meteor Shower – every November
Page 5: Leonid Meteor Shower – every November
Page 6: Leonid Meteor Shower – every November
Page 7: Leonid Meteor Shower – every November
Page 8: Leonid Meteor Shower – every November
Page 9: Leonid Meteor Shower – every November
Page 10: Leonid Meteor Shower – every November
Page 11: Leonid Meteor Shower – every November

Leonid Meteor Shower – every November

Page 12: Leonid Meteor Shower – every November
Page 13: Leonid Meteor Shower – every November
Page 14: Leonid Meteor Shower – every November
Page 15: Leonid Meteor Shower – every November

Murchison meteor

A carbonaceous chondrite which exploded into fragments over the town of Murchison, approx. 200 km north of Melbourne in Victoria, Australia, on Sep. 28, 1969. About 82 kg of the meteorite was recovered.

Page 16: Leonid Meteor Shower – every November

Eyewitnesses arriving at the scene reported smelling something like methanol or pyridine, an early indication that the object might contain organic material. Subsequent analysis by NASA scientists and a group led by Cyril Ponnamperuma revealed the presence of 6 amino acids commonly found in protein and 12 that did not occur in terrestrial life. All of these amino acids appeared in both dextrorotatory (right-handed) and laevorotatory (left-handed) forms, suggesting that they were not the result of Earthly contamination. The meteorite also contained hydrocarbons which appeared abiogenic in character and was enriched with a heavy isotope of carbon, confirming the extraterrestrial origin of its organics. Initial studies suggested that the amino acids in the Murchison meteorite showed no bias between left- and right-handed forms.

Page 17: Leonid Meteor Shower – every November

However, in 1997, John R. Cronin and Sandra Pizzarello of Arizona State University reported finding excesses of left-handed versions of four amino acids ranging from 7 to 9%,1 a result confirmed independently by another group.2 More than 70 amino acids have been identified in Murchison altogether. To this organic mixture, in 2001, was added a range of polyols – organic substances closely related to sugars such as glucose.