The following are observations of the 1999 Leonid Meteor storm made from the
Learmonth Solar Observatory in Western Australia.
The computed Zenithly Hourly Rates (ZHR) below have been supplied
with a standard deviation estimate based upon a Poisson distribution.
15 November 1999
1900-2000 UT
Visual Observations
Raw counts:
Leonids = 4 Sporadic = 7
Leonid ZHR: 8 +/- 4
16 November 1999
1900-2000 UT
Visual Observations
Raw counts:
Leonids = 2 Sporadic = 15
Leonid ZHR: 4 +/- 3
17 November 1999
1900-2000 UT
Visual Observations
Raw counts:
Leonids = 8 Sporadic = 13
Leonid ZHR: 17 +/- 6
18 November 1999
1900-2000 UT
Visual Observations
Raw counts:
Leonids = 34 Sporadic = 21
Leonid ZHR: 70 +/- 12
SUMMARY and COMMENTS
-
The histogram below shows the Leonid Zenithal Hourly Rate from 15 to
18 November 1999 for visual observations between 1900-2000 UT each day.
Leonid Zenithal Hourly Rate (1900-2000 UT)
Date 0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80
I----I----I----I----I----I----I----I----I
I
Nov 15 IXXXX
Nov 16 IXX
Nov 17 IXXXXXXXXX
Nov 18 IXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX
I
-
The histogram below shows the sporadic meteor hourly rate from 15 to
18 November 1999 for visual observations between 1900-2000 UT each day.
Sporadic Meteor Hourly Rate (1900-2000 UT)
Date 0 5 10 15 20 25 30
I----I----I----I----I----I----I
I
Nov 15 IXXXXXXX
Nov 16 IXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX
Nov 17 IXXXXXXXXXXXXX
Nov 18 IXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX
I
-
Comments:
For the first three days of observations at Learmonth, the Leonid
shower produced significantly fewer meteors than seen over the last
four years. The meteors were in general fainter and less likely
to produce trains - a feature common with Leonids in 1997 and 1998.
However on the 18th the count was much higher with an approximate
zenithal hourly rate of 70. However, even at this higher rate the
Leonids were still in general fainter, and shorter in length than
in 1998. No fireballs (mag < -4) were observed and just under 50%
of the observed leonids had trains, all trains lasting only a short
time (typically < 2 seconds). It appears that the increase we
observed at 18/1900-2000 UT was associated with a secondary peak
following the very short duration storm which peaked at a ZHR of
5400 near 18/0200 UT. This peak was observed over Europe.
An anomalously high number of sporadic meteors (21) was observed on
the 18th. None of these had any noticeable shower association.
-
This terminates Learmonth Leonid observations for 1999!!
Acknowledgment : Thanks to Alex Liu for great support. [JK]
Material Prepared by John Kennewell. © Copyright IPS - Radio and Space Services.