Analysis of June 2, 2016 bolide event

Abstract

On June 2, 2016 at 10h56m UTC, a -20.4 0.2 magnitude superbolide was observed over Arizona. Fragments were located a few days later and the meteorites were given the name Dishchii'bikoh. We present analysis of this event based on 3 cameras and a multi-spectral sensor observations by the SkySentinel continuous fireball-monitoring camera network, supplemented by a dash cam footage and a fragmentation model. The bolide began its luminous flight at an altitude of 100.2 0.4 km at coordinates φ = 34.555 0.002 planetographic latitude and λ = 110.459 0.002 longitude, and it had a pre-atmospheric velocity of 17.4 0.3 km/s. The calculated orbital parameters indicate that the meteoroid did not belong to any presently known asteroid family. From our calculations, the impacting object had an initial mass of 14.8 1.7 metric tonnes with an estimated initial diameter of 2.03 0.12 m.

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