Poging GOUD - Vrij

What to do if you find a meteorite

BBC Sky at Night Magazine

|

February 2025

Ever come across an unusual rock and wondered if it's a meteorite? Mark McIntyre explains how to tell if that stone really is a fragment from outer space

- Mark McIntyre

What to do if you find a meteorite

We're all fascinated by meteorites, ancient stony visitors from outer space. But what exactly are they, how do they get here and how can you tell if you've found one?

Most meteorites are fragments of material left over from the time when the Solar System was forming. Some never got scooped up by the gravity of a newly created planet, so they're orbiting the Sun alone. Others ended up as part of an asteroid or in the nucleus of a comet. Some meteorites come from other planets, dwarf planets or moons, including lunar and Martian fragments that were ejected into space following an impact.

So you can see why these objects capture our imaginations. They offer us a chance to study the conditions of the early Solar System or the surface of another planet without having to go there. Indeed, meteorites are still the only samples we have from Mars or some of the dwarf planets like Ceres, so they are an invaluable source of information.

How do these fragments end up on Earth? Over millions of years, the gravity of the planets, especially Jupiter, has pushed asteroids into particular orbits, such as the asteroid belt between Mars and Jupiter. Collisions between asteroids create large fragments, small particles and dust, some of which get nudged into new orbits that take them towards Earth, where they burn up in our atmosphere to form a meteor.

Comets that formed far beyond the orbit of Neptune can also be nudged into new orbits that bring them to the inner Solar System. As a comet nears the Sun, its icy nucleus starts to sublimate, releasing a trail of trapped dust. When Earth passes through this dust, these particles will also burn up in our atmosphere as meteors. Cometary debris is responsible for most of our meteor showers.

What are the chances?

MEER VERHALEN VAN BBC Sky at Night Magazine

BBC Sky at Night Magazine

BBC Sky at Night Magazine

How to find a speck in space

New Horizons proves stellar parallax can locate a probe in the vastness, using the light of just two stars

time to read

4 mins

October 2025

BBC Sky at Night Magazine

BBC Sky at Night Magazine

FIRST CONTACT

Seven missions that gave us our first real look at alien worlds

time to read

6 mins

October 2025

BBC Sky at Night Magazine

BBC Sky at Night Magazine

Possible planet found at Alpha Centauri A

If true, it would be the closest exoplanet ever found in a habitable zone

time to read

2 mins

October 2025

BBC Sky at Night Magazine

BBC Sky at Night Magazine

JWST decodes the chaos behind paint-splash nebula

A companion star may be sculpting tangled NGC 6072, a rare multipolar planetary nebula

time to read

1 min

October 2025

BBC Sky at Night Magazine

BBC Sky at Night Magazine

INSIDE THE SKY AT NIGHT

September's Sky at Night episode tackled the Hubble constant. George Dransfield considers how some of the cornerstones of science aren't as rock-solid as we thought

time to read

3 mins

October 2025

BBC Sky at Night Magazine

BBC Sky at Night Magazine

Bridge of stray stars revealed

Dark Energy Camera image of galaxy cluster Abell 3667 brings cosmic history into focus

time to read

1 min

October 2025

BBC Sky at Night Magazine

BBC Sky at Night Magazine

Stargazing in the Atacama Desert

Becca Marsh tours Chile's high Atacama Desert - home to some of the darkest skies and most advanced astronomical observatories on the planet - and discovers a stargazing destination like no other

time to read

7 mins

October 2025

BBC Sky at Night Magazine

BBC Sky at Night Magazine

Titan's lakes could form protocells

Study shows conditions are right to create vesicles, key structures in the origin of life

time to read

1 min

October 2025

BBC Sky at Night Magazine

BBC Sky at Night Magazine

Earliest black hole discovered

The supermassive black hole dates from just 500 million years after the Big Bang

time to read

2 mins

October 2025

BBC Sky at Night Magazine

BBC Sky at Night Magazine

FIELD OF VIEW

Let there be less light

time to read

2 mins

October 2025

Listen

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size