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#1
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At about 3:57AM I saw what I can only imagine was a comet of some sort
over LA. From where I was standing it was heading East-northeast. I have seen comets before, but they looked like faint blips compared to this. The sighting was so very dramatic compared to what I have seen previously, it looked like a big ball of color, I could hardly believe my eyes. What sort of authorities on sky sightings do I contact to corroborate this? It seems so surreal that I am having a hard time believing that it happened. |
#2
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How about if you describe in greater detail what you saw?
You said it was about 3:57AM. That is very helpful. It rules out a number of possibile things that might be seen near sunrise or sunset. You said that from where you was standing, it was heading east-northeast. Can you say roughly where you were in the LA area? In which direction did you first see the thing? (Either a compass heading or direction to a landmark.) In which direction did you last see it? Did you have to turn to follow it accross the sky? Did it change direction at all, or did it move in a straight line? How high in the sky did it appear? In degrees above the horizon (90 degrees is straight up), or hand-widths above the horizon. See this web page for info on estimating height above the horizon (or "altitude") in hand-widths (halfway down the page): http://www.cloudbait.com/science/fireballs.html What was the altitude when you first saw it? When you last saw it? When it was at its highest? How long was it visible? A couple of seconds? A minute? Five minutes? What shape was the object? Was it a pinpoint like a star or planet? Was it round or elonglated in the direction it was moving? How big was the object, in terms of angle? If you hold up your little finger at arm's length, it will more than cover the full moon. Was the object wider than that? Wider than your thumb? Wider than your hand? Did the object look sharp-edged or fuzzy? How bright was it? Compare the brightness to something you could see from the same location at the same time, such as a streetlight that you know is a mile away, or a lighted wall or billboard in the next block. What color or colors did it have? That should pin it down fairly well. -- Jeff, in Minneapolis |
#3
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How about if you describe in greater detail what you saw?
You said it was about 3:57AM. That is very helpful. It rules out a number of possibile things that might be seen near sunrise or sunset. You said that from where you was standing, it was heading east-northeast. Can you say roughly where you were in the LA area? In which direction did you first see the thing? (Either a compass heading or direction to a landmark.) In which direction did you last see it? I was exactly at this point: http://www.google.com/maps?f=q&hl=en...eles,+CA+90007 I was facing due north, and the object appeared at North North East (about 23 degrees) Did you have to turn to follow it accross the sky? No. Did it change direction at all, or did it move in a straight line? Straight line How high in the sky did it appear? In degrees above the horizon (90 degrees is straight up), or hand-widths above the horizon. See this web page for info on estimating height above the horizon (or "altitude") in hand-widths (halfway down the page): http://www.cloudbait.com/science/fireballs.html It was at about 70 degrees. What was the altitude when you first saw it? When you last saw it? When it was at its highest? It was the highest when I first saw it (at 70 degrees) then it traveled for perhaps a little over a second and disappeared (then about 60 degrees to the ground). How long was it visible? A couple of seconds? A minute? Five minutes? A bit more than a second. What shape was the object? Was it a pinpoint like a star or planet? Was it round or elonglated in the direction it was moving? It was the shape of a ball that grew as it shone and then disappeared. Also, the object had a trail, made no noise and disappeared in a flash. Very much like this: http://www.cloudbait.com/science/200...024409_002.gif How big was the object, in terms of angle? If you hold up your little finger at arm's length, it will more than cover the full moon. Was the object wider than that? Wider than your thumb? Wider than your hand? It was about the size of the moon. Did the object look sharp-edged or fuzzy? Fuzzy, it was kind of glimmering, like a firework looks. How bright was it? Compare the brightness to something you could see from the same location at the same time, such as a streetlight that you know is a mile away, or a lighted wall or billboard in the next block. What color or colors did it have? Green/white, a bit like: http://www.cloudbait.com/science/peekskill.jpg That should pin it down fairly well. I am sure that anyone looking at the sky at 3:57AM last night must have seen this, it was impossible to miss. Maybe there will be some reports, but I have not heard anything yet. |
#4
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Good description!
It definitely sounds like you saw a small but bright meteor. It may have been headed approximately toward you, and/or it may have exploded. I've never seen a meteor break apart or explode, so I think that's fairly rare. I've seen a few really bright green meteors, and they also lasted only about a second. My guess is that the meteoroid was about the size of a marble. The majority of visible meteors are only about the size of a small pea. Anything much smaller than that isn't visible. Anything much larger than a marble would probably last longer than the meteor you saw. I think the Peekskill meteor was visible for a minute or longer. The biggest and longest-lasting meteor I've ever heard about, by far, is one that was seen in the middle of the day on August 10, 1972. A bright meteor was seen and photographed from Utah to Alberta, Canada. The meteoroid, estimated to be the size of a house, or larger, is the only one known to enter and then leave Earth's atmosphere. Good thing that it didn't hit the ground, because it could easily have wiped out a whole city. It was visible for about 20 minutes. I asked about your location and the direction you were looking because I thought there was a possibility that you saw a rocket launch from Vandenberg AFB. Your description of the object rules that out. The first time I saw a bright meteor I wanted to get some kind of confirmation from an astronomer, too. My dad didn't know a lot about astronomy, but he knew that astronomers don't try to keep track of every bright meteor, and suggested to me that my expectation was a bit unrealistic. There are only a few places that have cameras watching the sky all night long, in hopes of imaging a fireball and then using the images to find a meteorite on the ground. The Cloudbait Observatory in Colorado is one. I don't know whether the technique has worked for anyone, yet. You could look on the Griffith Observatory website for info about asking questions. I'd guess that they get an awful lot of questions, and don't have time to answer all of them, but they may be putting Q & A online now. -- Jeff, in Minneapolis |
#5
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Thanks for the help.
Maybe I will never have this confirmed, but it eases the mind to know that it was likely a meteor. |
#6
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![]() wrote in message oups.com... Thanks for the help. Maybe I will never have this confirmed, but it eases the mind to know that it was likely a meteor. Comets don't appear to visibly move, by the way. They're too far away (except in the unlikely event you were watching one about to hit the earth. |
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