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A Reformulation of Divine's Interplanetary Model

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  31 July 2018

M. J. Matney
Affiliation:
Lockheed Martin Engineering and Science Services, NASA Johnson Space Center, C23, Houston, TX 77058
D. J. Kessler
Affiliation:
NASA Johnson Space Center, C23, Houston, TX 77058

Extract

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Divine (1993) developed a mathematical model to use measurements of interplanetary dust to determine the orbital distributions of particles in interplanetary space. The power of the model is that it uses the fact that the dust particles are in Keplerian orbits to correct for the observation biases based on spatial density and velocity efifects of the orbits. In order to do this, he creates families of dust orbits; within each of which the particles have mathematically separable distributions of mass, periapsis, eccentricity, and inclination. He then uses a trial-and-error method to vary these distributions until an adequate fit is made to the data. Each of his distributions is loosely based on populations of interplanetary dust that are believed to be present in the Solar System.

Type
I. Dynamics of the Interplanetary Dust Cloud
Copyright
Copyright © Astronomical Society of the Pacific 1996

References

Divine, N. 1993, JGR, 98, E9, 17029CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kessler, D. J. 1981, Icarus, 48, 39 Google Scholar