Article 5MWWG Why don’t we see more meteorites after big asteroid belt collisions?

Why don’t we see more meteorites after big asteroid belt collisions?

by
Kate Ravilious
from Science | The Guardian on (#5MWWG)

Amount of cosmic debris reaching Earth has stayed surprisingly constant in last 500m years, say scientists

This month it is worth turning your eyes to the night sky to watch the spectacular Perseid meteor shower. Peak viewing time will be around 12 August, when as many as 150 meteors an hour will whizz overhead. Generated by Earth passing through the debris left behind by Comet Swift-Tuttle, these meteors are a reliable event, but other meteors, such as the fireball that recently lit up southern Norway, are more random.

Most meteors burn themselves out in the atmosphere, but thousands of tons of cosmic dust do still make it to Earth's surface every year. New research, published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, shows that the number of meteorite strikes has stayed surprisingly constant for millions of years.

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