Home
Fireball lights up early morning sky in Utah
(+video)Yesterday, Nov. 18th,
something exploded in the atmosphere above the
western United States. Witnesses in Colorado, Utah,
Wyoming and Idaho say the fireball "turned night
into day" and issued shock waves that "shook the
ground" when it exploded just after midnight
Mountain Standard Time. The fireball was so bright
it actually turned the sky noontime blue, as shown
in this image from KSL TV in Utah:
(Click on picture to watch video)
Although the fireball appeared during the
Leonid meteor shower,
it was not a Leonid. Infrasound recordings of the
blast suggest a small asteroid hitting Earth's
atmosphere and exploding with an energy of 0.5 to 1
kiloton of TNT. Experts liken the event to the
Park Forest fireball
of 2003, which scattered dozens of meteorites across
a suburb of Chicago. Meteorites are likely from this
fireball as well. Stay tuned for developing
information about the possible fall zone.
More fireball images:
from KSL TV in Utah;
from KTVB News in
Idaho;
from Thomas Ashcraft
near Santa Fe, New Mexico;
from Marsha Adams
of Sedona, Arizona;
Approximately 6 hours after the fireball, people
in Utah and Colorado got another surprise. As the
sun rose over those states, a twisting electric-blue
cloud appeared in the dawn sky:

"These curious clouds on the horizon caught my
attention just before sunrise," says photographer
Don Brown of Park City, Utah. "They were strangely
bright relative to the rest of the sky."
The cloud strongly resembles artificial
noctilucent clouds formed at high altitudes by
rocket and shuttle launches. Yet there was no (officially
reported) rocket launch at dawn on Nov. 18th. Could
the cloud be associated with the fireball? The
geographical coincidence is certainly striking.
Debris from the fireball should have dissipated by
sunrise, but the cloud remains unexplained and a
connection to the fireball cannot yet be dismissed.
Source:
Spaceweather.com
Home
Terug
naar Astronomie |