[meteorite-list] Spectacular Fireball Outshines Moon Over American Southeast (Video)

From: Ron Baalke <baalke_at_meteoritecentral.com>
Date: Thu, 5 Sep 2013 16:59:14 -0700 (PDT)
Message-ID: <201309052359.r85NxEgk007443_at_zagami.jpl.nasa.gov>

http://www.space.com/22637-fireball-brighter-than-moon-video.html

Spectacular Fireball Outshines Moon Over American Southeast (Video)
By Mike Wall
space.com
September 4, 2013

A dazzlingly bright fireball lit up the skies over the American South
last week, and NASA caught the dramatic action on video.

The meteor blazed up in the predawn hours of Aug. 28, putting on a brief
but spectacular show for night owls in several southeastern states.

"Recorded by all six NASA cameras in the Southeast, this fireball was
one of the brightest observed by the network in 5 years of operations,"
Bill Cooke, head of the Meteoroid Environment Office at NASA's Marshall
Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Ala., wrote in a blog post Tuesday
(Sept. 3). "From Chickamauga, Georgia, the meteor was 20 times brighter
than the full moon; shadows were cast on the ground as far south as
Cartersville."

The asteroid that sparked the sky show was probably about 2 feet wide
and weighed more than 100 pounds, Cooke added. The space rock hit Earth's
atmosphere above the Georgia/Tennessee border at 3:27 a.m. EDT (0727 GMT)
on Aug. 28, moving northeast at 56,000 mph.

The meteor began to break apart in the skies northeast of Ocoee, Tenn.,
at an altitude of 33 miles, Cooke wrote.

"NASA cameras lost track of the fireball pieces at an altitude of 21 miles,
by which time they had slowed to a speed of 19,400 mph," Cooke wrote.
"Sensors on the ground recorded sound waves ('sonic booms') from this
event, and there are indications on Doppler weather radar of a rain of
small meteoritic particles falling to the ground east of Cleveland,
Tennessee."

Every day, more than 100 tons of material - most of it grains of dust
and other tiny pieces of asteroids and comets - bombards Earth from outer
space. Virtually all of this stuff burns up harmlessly in the atmosphere,
sometimes generating the bright streaks in the sky that we call meteors,
or shooting stars, in the process.

If a meteor blazes more brightly than Venus in the sky, it's classified
as a fireball. NASA's Meteoroid Environment Office has set up a network
of cameras to track and study fireballs, with the aim of gaining a better
understanding of where their parent space rocks are coming from. Such
information should be helpful to spacecraft designers, NASA officials
say.

The space agency's All-sky Fireball Network currently consists of 12 cameras.
Six of them are in the Southeast (spread across Alabama, Georgia, North
Carolina and Tennessee), while two apiece are in Ohio, Pennsylvania and
New Mexico.
Received on Thu 05 Sep 2013 07:59:14 PM PDT


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