Handful of Space

Handful of Space Hold the secrets of outer space in the palm of your hand. My name is Jason Whitcomb and I am a space enthusiast.

My fascination and joy holding and examining meteorites has grown beyond just me. Now it is time for me to share that joy with you. Welcome to Handful of Space, where you can hold the wonders of our solar system in the palm of your hand.

Really great selection of material up this week on the auctions. I am happy to combine shipping into one package to save...
08/18/2024

Really great selection of material up this week on the auctions. I am happy to combine shipping into one package to save money. I also have some new stickers available 🙂

https://www.ebay.com/str/handfulofspace

I would like to highlight a few stickers and these sweet meteorites.

Thank you for the likes and support!

Some nice meteorites to fill out your display and inspire dreams of space.https://www.ebay.com/str/handfulofspaceI would...
08/11/2024

Some nice meteorites to fill out your display and inspire dreams of space.

https://www.ebay.com/str/handfulofspace

I would like to highlight NWA 16158 Diogenite 9.3g, noritic breccia meteorite, polished half stone, wow!

Thank you!

08/11/2024

Really great selection of material up this week on the auctions. I am happy to combine shipping into one package to save money. Don't miss out!

https://www.ebay.com/str/handfulofspace

I would like to highlight these sweet mets.

Thank you!

07/28/2024

Here is a good chance to add some sweet meteorites to your collection! Don't miss out :)

https://www.ebay.com/str/handfulofspace

I would like to share with you these sweet meteorites.

Thank you!

Some great meteorites available on the auction block this week.  It is a good chance to add some sweet material to your ...
07/28/2024

Some great meteorites available on the auction block this week. It is a good chance to add some sweet material to your collection! Here I would like to highlight something really special.

https://www.ebay.com/str/handfulofspace

I would like to share with you NWA 16525 Eucrite-mmict 13.6g meteorite vesicular polished Jikharra 001 pair WOW

Thank you!

Some great meteorites available on the auction block this week.  It is a good chance to add some sweet material to your ...
07/28/2024

Some great meteorites available on the auction block this week. It is a good chance to add some sweet material to your collection!

https://www.ebay.com/str/handfulofspace

I would like to share with you NWA 16551 LL3 6.04g polished meteorite thin fragmented slice full of chondrules!

Thank you!

Some great meteorites available on the auction block this week.  It is a good chance to add some sweet material to your ...
07/28/2024

Some great meteorites available on the auction block this week. It is a good chance to add some sweet material to your collection!

https://www.ebay.com/str/handfulofspace

I would like to share with you HaH 346, "Ghadamis", L6 19.4g meteorite whole stone great crust fragmented area

Thank you!

Some great meteorites available on the auction block this week.  It is a good chance to add some sweet material to your ...
07/28/2024

Some great meteorites available on the auction block this week. It is a good chance to add some sweet material to your collection!

https://www.ebay.com/str/handfulofspace

I would like to share with you NWA 15758 CK6 4.58g meteorite with polished window, nice rare material

Thank you!

Arizona State University just opened up a free online credentialed course titled:Countless Worlds in our Solar System: A...
07/23/2024

Arizona State University just opened up a free online credentialed course titled:
Countless Worlds in our Solar System: Asteroids, Comets, and Meteorites.
Signing up is easy and the course is at your own pace so you can squeeze it in during your busy life.
See you there!

Advance your engineering skills with our Countless Worlds in our Solar System course. Earn a digital badge in this online, self-paced program.

I was recently asked a question about the weights on Certificates of Authenticity being off a fraction of a gram.  It wa...
07/23/2024

I was recently asked a question about the weights on Certificates of Authenticity being off a fraction of a gram. It was a really good question that I bet a lot of folks have so I wanted to share my answer here also.

This is pretty normal actually.

First is the scale. There are different qualities of scales, and most that we use are at the consumer level. Basically if it is "affordable" it is in this zone. Scientific scales don't have a lot of the problems I am going to discuss here, but are also much more expensive and are for research quality measurements.

So for most of our scales the last digit in a scale is to be taken with a grain of salt. This is for two reasons. First is that it is more or less rounding the imaginary next digit up or down. Second is that scales can very easily lose accuracy on the last digit and often need to be recalibrated. A quick temperature change, overloading it, or a bump can all cause a slight error on the tail end. Low batteries are also a BIG reason scales start to wander. If you have a scale be sure to find the calibration instructions and get the proper calibration weights to keep it tuned.

If you are talking very fine readings, like the WIW game, little details can cause fluctuation. At that sensitivity leaning on the table, uneven surfaces, or a breeze can mess it up too. A lot of scales have trouble at the "baseline" too. Like I know my WIW scale likes to add .003 on very light items but has no problem at like 20g. So I like to double check my measurement on small stuff by adding the 20g weight also to see if they match. I end up hitting "tare" and recalibrating a lot to make sure I get it as accurate as I can. Another thing to note is that placement on the tray can give some variation, meaning dead center vs edge may provide different readings.

Not having to do with the scale, here is a common reason for a small difference- the relative air humidity when and where it was weighed. I noticed it from doing the game. That is why I now put all specimens for the game in a dehydrator for a while before weighing so that it is at an accurate baseline, but I live near the coast so if it is hanging out in open air for a while after it will pick up some weight. Pretty crazy right?
At the collector level we use weight to help determine price but the most important thing is that it is close enough to tie it to the COA thus keeping the chain of provenance.

Summary or things that can alter the measurement:

-Temperature change of the scale itself.
-Uneven surface the scale is on
-Physical shock to the scale
-Drifting over time
-Low batteries
-Air flow
-Not centering the object being weighed
-Moisture content of the object being measured

Here are some more insights provided from other members of the meteorite community:

Pat Brown offers: Good write-up on scale uncertainty. One more factor not mentioned in your excellent discussion is the accuracy of the calibration weight. The low cost scales that we use on meteorites often come with a calibration weight of unknown accuracy class. Attached are a couple of documents from Troemner, a top manufacturer of calibration weights of many different accuracy classes: https://www.troemner.com/calibration-weight-guide

David "DrSolo" Peri suggests: Sometimes putting a tray on three scale before turning the scale on can provide another way to perform a secondary way of double or triple checking accuracy of weight.
once you turn the scale on, remove the tray it will provide you the - weight of the tray replacing the tray should return the weight to 00.000.
avoiding the TARE button all together. your scale may read different it both processes.
identifying a need to change batteries of the need of calibration.

Sean Mahoney says: One good reason to calibrate before quoting the weight of something and especially before writing the CoA. Calibration takes seconds. I do it multiple times every day when my scales are very active, like at trade shows or when doing multiple listings. Very affordable M1 calibration weight are accurate to +/-50mg in 1kg. Cheaper M2 weights are also fine being accurate to +/-160mg in 1kg. I am constantly shocked by how many people never calibrate their scales. How on earth do they know they are accurate? When you regularly calibrate you quickly learn how quickly scales can loose significant accuracy.

Michael Farmer adds: Every scale will weigh a tad different, everything affects accuracy. Altitude, temperature, even humidity

Jeroen Zuiderwijk give us this interesting insight: Location on earth matters, as earths gravity varies depending on where you are on earth. This can add a difference up to 0.7%. Another reason to calibrate scales, particularly if you travel around with them.

Just got done with the podcast version of this video and thought you would enjoy it also.  It is a great discussion of i...
07/20/2024

Just got done with the podcast version of this video and thought you would enjoy it also. It is a great discussion of interstellar objects with a fair amount of discussion on meteorites and an emphasis on the development of our solar system. You are going to dig it!

Oumuamua and Borisov were the first interstellar visitors found by humanity. There should be many more of them. How can we find it and what will it mean for ...

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