[meteorite-list] Meteor Awes Arizona Residents
From: Ron Baalke <baalke_at_meteoritecentral.com>
Date: Wed Oct 4 12:37:16 2006 Message-ID: <200610041637.JAA04950_at_zagami.jpl.nasa.gov> http://www.azcentral.com/community/ahwatukee/articles/1004ar-meteor1004Z14.html Meteor awes Foothills residents JJ Hensley The Arizona Republic October 4, 2006 Jeff Hartman was just out for a night of relaxing stargazing with his new telescope Sunday night, but he didn't need that visual amplifier to witness the biggest news in the sky that evening. The fireball, an extremely bright meteor, streaking across the sky caught the attention of Hartman, an Ahwatukee Foothill video-game programmer, and countless others throughout the western United States. Hartman used to work at the Tomchin Planetarium and Observatory at West Virginia University, so unlike many observers, he didn't mistake the fireball for a wayward piece of space trash or a downed plane. "It was very impressive," Hartman said of the unexpected sight viewed from a park near 44th Street and Ray Road. "It was probably the width of a human hand per second across the sky." Nikki Diamantopoulos saw the same thing as she ate dessert in her Ahwatukee backyard Sunday evening. "It was probably the biggest shooting star I'd ever seen," she said. "And I did hope it wasn't anything worse." Worried residents called police and fire departments. It turns out Arizonans weren't alone in witnessing the fireball as it hurtled through the night sky. Residents in New Mexico, Colorado, Oklahoma and Texas reported similar sightings shortly after 10 p.m. Sunday. Another was reported in Washington State a short time earlier. A group that tracks such events found the early October increase in meteor activity follows a pattern. In October 1996, Mark Boslough, a New Mexico resident who tracks incidents, received reports from Texas, California and New Mexico of large meteors. A few years before that, the same pattern emerged along the East Coast, and in October 1998, the same pattern was repeated in El Paso. "It is possible that early October may be the time of an annual meteor shower, but with bigger meteors," Boslough said. Received on Wed 04 Oct 2006 12:37:14 PM PDT |
StumbleUpon del.icio.us Yahoo MyWeb |