Danielle E. Moser
Marshall Space Flight Center
33 Papers
93 Citations
Danielle E. Moser is an academic researcher from Marshall Space Flight Center. The author has contributed to research in topics: Meteoroid & Meteor shower. The author has an hindex of 10, co-authored 33 publications.
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Papers
A 500-kiloton airburst over Chelyabinsk and an enhanced hazard from small impactors
Peter Brown,Jelle Assink,L. Astiz,Rhiannon C. Blaauw,Mark Boslough,Jiří Borovička,N. Brachet,David Brown,Margaret Campbell-Brown,Lars Ceranna,William J. Cooke,C. D. de Groot-Hedlin,Douglas P. Drob,Wayne N. Edwards,Läslo Evers,Läslo Evers,Milton Garces,J. Gill,Michael A. H. Hedlin,Aaron Kingery,Gabi Laske,A. Le Pichon,Pierrick Mialle,Danielle E. Moser,A. Saffer,Elizabeth A. Silber,Pieter Smets,Pieter Smets,R. E. Spalding,Pavel Spurný,E. Tagliaferri,D. Uren,Robert Weryk,Rod Whitaker,Z. Krzeminski +34 more
TL;DR: A global survey of airbursts of a kiloton or more is performed, and it is found that the number of impactors with diameters of tens of metres may be an order of magnitude higher than estimates based on other techniques, which suggests a non-equilibrium in the near-Earth asteroid population.
The Status of the NASA All Sky Fireball Network
William J. Cooke,Danielle E. Moser +1 more
- 15 Sep 2011
TL;DR: The NASA All Sky Fireball Network as mentioned in this paper consists of 6 meteor video cameras in the southern United States, with plans to expand to 15 cameras by 2013, and as of mid-2011, the network had detected 1796 multi-station meteors including meteors from 43 different meteor showers.
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The Hamburg meteorite fall : Fireball trajectory, orbit, and dynamics
Peter Brown,Denis Vida,Danielle E. Moser,Mikael Granvik,Mikael Granvik,W. J. Koshak,D. Chu,Jordan K. Steckloff,Jordan K. Steckloff,A. Licata,S. Hariri,J. Mason,Michael J. Mazur,William Cooke,Z. Krzeminski +14 more
TL;DR: The Hamburg (H4) meteorite fell on 17 January 2018 at 01:08 UT approximately 10 km north of Ann Arbor, Michigan as discussed by the authors, and more than two dozen fragments totaling under 1 kg were recovered.
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Luminous Efficiency of Hypervelocity Meteoroid Impacts on the Moon Derived from the 2006 Geminids, 2007 Lyrids, and 2008 Taurids
Danielle E. Moser,Robert M. Suggs,Wesley Swift,Ronnie J. Suggs,William J. Cooke,A. M. Diekmann,H. M. Koehler +6 more
- 24 May 2010
TL;DR: In this paper, an analysis of the Geminid, Lyrid, and Taurid lunar impacts is carried out in order to determine the luminous efficiency in the 400-800 nm wavelength range for each shower.
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