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The Activity Profiles and Peak Flux of Radar Meteor ShowersMeteor showers are transient phenomena; a limited duration is what distinguishes a shower from a sporadic source. They do not, however, have clear start and end times; instead, shower activity gradually (or rapidly) increases over time, reaches a peak, and then decays. In this report, we examine the activity profiles of 38 meteor showers using 20 years of single-station shower fluxes from the Canadian Meteor Orbit Radar (CMOR). We find that a number of showers, such as the Southern delta Aquariids (SDAs), exhibit a broad maximum in activity rather than a sharp peak. We also find that approximately one-third of showers exhibit asymmetric activity profiles in which the rate in which activity rises prior to the peak differs from the rate at which it decays after the peak. We provide a functional form for meteor shower activity profiles that incorporates these features and use these profile fits to estimate each shower’s peak flux.

This report also includes an uncertainty analysis for CMOR fluxes. This includes the first (to our knowledge) characterization of systematic uncertainty in radar meteor fluxes.
Document ID
20240005599
Acquisition Source
Marshall Space Flight Center
Document Type
Other - Technical Report
Authors
A V Moorhead
(Marshall Space Flight Center Redstone Arsenal, United States)
M D Campbell-Brown
(Western University London, Ontario, Canada)
P G Brown
(Western University London, Ontario, Canada)
Date Acquired
May 3, 2024
Publication Date
April 20, 2024
Subject Category
Astronomy
Report/Patent Number
OSMA/MEO/Report–13
Funding Number(s)
WBS: 817091.40.82.62
CONTRACT_GRANT: 80NSSC21M0073
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Use by or on behalf of the US Gov. Permitted.
Technical Review
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