Abstract

Abstract Infrasound observations are an important tool in assessing the energetics of bolides and can help quantify the flux of meteoroids through Earth’s atmosphere. Bolides are also important atmospheric sources for assessing long-range infrasound propagation models and can be used as benchmark events for validating the International Monitoring System (IMS) infrasound network, which is designed to detect nuclear tests in the atmosphere. This article exploits unique infrasound observations from a large bolide recorded on IMS infrasound arrays and high-density infrasound deployments in the United States to assess limitations in infrasound source scaling relationships. The observations provide an unprecedented sampling of infrasound propagation along a transect at an azimuth of 60° from the source to a distance of ∼8000 km. Widely used empirical laws for assessing bolide energetics and state-of-the-art numerical models for simulating infrasound propagation are assessed to quantify important discrepancies with the observations. In particular, empirical laws for equivalent yield, which are based on signal period and are assumed to be relatively unaffected by propagation effects, can be heavily contaminated by site noise. In addition, by modeling infrasound propagation over a range of ∼8000 km, we show that state-of-the-art models do not reproduce the observed amplitude decay over this long range (which decays by a rate of at least 2 higher than can be modeled).

Highlights

  • Infrasound observations provide an important forensic clue for understanding meteoroids, their energetics (Silber et al, 2018)

  • The infrasound observations from the Bering Sea event on the International Monitoring System (IMS) network have been reported by Pilger et al (2020), who estimate a yield of 50 kT using an empirical period–yield law, which we discuss more in the following

  • It is important to emphasize that the parabolic equation (PE) simulations. Our analysis of this dataset illustrates the challenges in estimating a consistent energy release for a bolide event using both https://www.seismosoc.org/publications/the-seismic-record/

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Summary

Introduction

Infrasound observations provide an important forensic clue for understanding meteoroids, their energetics (Silber et al, 2018). Bolide Energetics and Infrasound Propagation: Exploring the 18 December 2018 Bering Sea Event to Identify Limitations of Empirical and Numerical Models, The Seismic Record.

Results
Conclusion

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