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Was reported on the local Dallas news and seen by many... but no details
have surfaced yet. 2nd hand info from observer: Wed 7-7-04 about 9:10 - 9:15 PM NE to SW - large green fireball with orange vapor trail, size of dime (or larger!) at arm's length, cylinder shape, tail was 20-30% length of sky. simply "vanished" - no fade or explosion. Any ideas? She seemed to be able to describe normal meteorites and saw space shuttle re-entry, so she had point of reference. "never seen anything like this ever" |
#2
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![]() "Glenn Johnson" wrote in message m... Was reported on the local Dallas news and seen by many... but no details have surfaced yet. 2nd hand info from observer: Wed 7-7-04 about 9:10 - 9:15 PM NE to SW - large green fireball with orange vapor trail, size of dime (or larger!) at arm's length, cylinder shape, tail was 20-30% length of sky. simply "vanished" - no fade or explosion. Any ideas? She seemed to be able to describe normal meteorites and saw space shuttle re-entry, so she had point of reference. "never seen anything like this ever" |
#3
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![]() "Glenn Johnson" wrote in message m... Was reported on the local Dallas news and seen by many... but no details have surfaced yet. 2nd hand info from observer: Wed 7-7-04 about 9:10 - 9:15 PM NE to SW - large green fireball with orange vapor trail, size of dime (or larger!) at arm's length, cylinder shape, tail was 20-30% length of sky. simply "vanished" - no fade or explosion. Any ideas? She seemed to be able to describe normal meteorites and saw space shuttle re-entry, so she had point of reference. "never seen anything like this ever" |
#4
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![]() "Glenn Johnson" wrote in message m... Was reported on the local Dallas news and seen by many... but no details have surfaced yet. 2nd hand info from observer: Wed 7-7-04 about 9:10 - 9:15 PM NE to SW - large green fireball with orange vapor trail, size of dime (or larger!) at arm's length, cylinder shape, tail was 20-30% length of sky. simply "vanished" - no fade or explosion. Any ideas? She seemed to be able to describe normal meteorites and saw space shuttle re-entry, so she had point of reference. "never seen anything like this ever" |
#5
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![]() "Glenn Johnson" wrote in message m... Was reported on the local Dallas news and seen by many... but no details have surfaced yet. 2nd hand info from observer: Wed 7-7-04 about 9:10 - 9:15 PM NE to SW - large green fireball with orange vapor trail, size of dime (or larger!) at arm's length, cylinder shape, tail was 20-30% length of sky. simply "vanished" - no fade or explosion. Any ideas? She seemed to be able to describe normal meteorites and saw space shuttle re-entry, so she had point of reference. "never seen anything like this ever" |
#6
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"Glenn Johnson" wrote in message
m... Was reported on the local Dallas news and seen by many... but no details have surfaced yet. 2nd hand info from observer: Wed 7-7-04 about 9:10 - 9:15 PM NE to SW - large green fireball with orange vapor trail, size of dime (or larger!) at arm's length, cylinder shape, tail was 20-30% length of sky. simply "vanished" - no fade or explosion. Any ideas? She seemed to be able to describe normal meteorites and saw space shuttle re-entry, so she had point of reference. "never seen anything like this ever" First, I apologize for the two empty reponses I sent a few minutes ago. My mouse double-clicked in response to my single-click at the worst possible time. A search of Google news turned up a number of news reports of this widely seen event. This one from AP contains a description by a witness in Tulsa, OK, that defines the event as a meteor: http://www.katc.com/Global/story.asp?S=2014007 "It was just a flash in the pan. It was over in about three seconds," he said. A decaying satellite would have been visible far longer, on the order of one minute, depending on how much of its track is observed. I was fortunate to observe the decay of Raduga 33 on 2004 May 06 UTC, and timed its passage at four points as it crossed the sky. It took 85 seconds to travel from 17 degrees elevation almost due west to 12 deg elevation in the south east. A meteor would have covered a similar arc in a few seconds. Ted Molczan |
#7
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"Glenn Johnson" wrote in message
m... Was reported on the local Dallas news and seen by many... but no details have surfaced yet. 2nd hand info from observer: Wed 7-7-04 about 9:10 - 9:15 PM NE to SW - large green fireball with orange vapor trail, size of dime (or larger!) at arm's length, cylinder shape, tail was 20-30% length of sky. simply "vanished" - no fade or explosion. Any ideas? She seemed to be able to describe normal meteorites and saw space shuttle re-entry, so she had point of reference. "never seen anything like this ever" First, I apologize for the two empty reponses I sent a few minutes ago. My mouse double-clicked in response to my single-click at the worst possible time. A search of Google news turned up a number of news reports of this widely seen event. This one from AP contains a description by a witness in Tulsa, OK, that defines the event as a meteor: http://www.katc.com/Global/story.asp?S=2014007 "It was just a flash in the pan. It was over in about three seconds," he said. A decaying satellite would have been visible far longer, on the order of one minute, depending on how much of its track is observed. I was fortunate to observe the decay of Raduga 33 on 2004 May 06 UTC, and timed its passage at four points as it crossed the sky. It took 85 seconds to travel from 17 degrees elevation almost due west to 12 deg elevation in the south east. A meteor would have covered a similar arc in a few seconds. Ted Molczan |
#8
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In article e.rogers.co
m, Ted Molczan writes For additional information on this and most things meteoric, take a look at the recent postings to MeteorObs bulletin board. You'll find links to several news reports, eye-witness reports and a video clip of the Texas event. http://www.meteorobs.org/ or if you prefer a Yahoo interface... http://groups.yahoo.com/group/meteorobs/ -- David Entwistle |
#9
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In article e.rogers.co
m, Ted Molczan writes For additional information on this and most things meteoric, take a look at the recent postings to MeteorObs bulletin board. You'll find links to several news reports, eye-witness reports and a video clip of the Texas event. http://www.meteorobs.org/ or if you prefer a Yahoo interface... http://groups.yahoo.com/group/meteorobs/ -- David Entwistle |
#10
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Thanks for the information!
I knew I could count on this newsgroup for great info... Glenn "David Entwistle" wrote in message ... In article e.rogers.co m, Ted Molczan writes For additional information on this and most things meteoric, take a look at the recent postings to MeteorObs bulletin board. You'll find links to several news reports, eye-witness reports and a video clip of the Texas event. http://www.meteorobs.org/ or if you prefer a Yahoo interface... http://groups.yahoo.com/group/meteorobs/ -- David Entwistle |
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