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#1
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I saw a nonmoving circular flash in the SSW sky at approximately 40deg
above horizontal at 11:27PM CST on Saturday . I have seen alot of meteors and a few bolides and this had no trail, it was static. Abrupt flash that dissipated slowly compared to initial flash. Blue/white in color lasting only 1-2 seconds. I am guessing a stellar explosion, perhaps? Anyone see this? |
#3
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I am thinking a stellar explosion would be a big deal....
Iridium flare is far more likely. (IMO) "TechStuf" wrote in message om... I saw a nonmoving circular flash in the SSW sky at approximately 40deg above horizontal at 11:27PM CST on Saturday . I have seen alot of meteors and a few bolides and this had no trail, it was static. Abrupt flash that dissipated slowly compared to initial flash. Blue/white in color lasting only 1-2 seconds. I am guessing a stellar explosion, perhaps? Anyone see this? |
#4
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TechStuf wrote:
I saw a nonmoving circular flash in the SSW sky at approximately 40deg above horizontal at 11:27PM CST on Saturday . I have seen alot of meteors and a few bolides and this had no trail, it was static. Abrupt flash that dissipated slowly compared to initial flash. Blue/white in color lasting only 1-2 seconds. I am guessing a stellar explosion, perhaps? Anyone see this? I would guess a meteor that happened to be pointed straight toward you. Sounds weird, but that's what it looks like. :-) Steve |
#5
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I saw similar flash Tuesday night, around 2130 hours EDT, right at the
star 53 EPS CYG (the "right hand" in the Northern Cross). I was in my pool, just idly watching the sky, when a light flared up, then dimmed out to nothing. It took maybe two or three seconds. I couldn't figure out what it was, and I never saw anything like it before. As someone mentioned, I guess it could have been a meteorite coming right at me. It was really unique. I saw a nonmoving circular flash in the SSW sky at approximately 40deg above horizontal at 11:27PM CST on Saturday . I have seen alot of meteors and a few bolides and this had no trail, it was static. Abrupt flash that dissipated slowly compared to initial flash. Blue/white in color lasting only 1-2 seconds. I am guessing a stellar explosion, perhaps? Anyone see this? |
#6
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"Tom Mosher" wrote in message gy.com...
It could have been an Iridium flare. http://antwrp.gsfc.nasa.gov/apod/ap980402.html Tom And also see http://www.satobs.org/iridium.html for a picture of an Iridium satellite with its huge optically reflective surfaces. This site also contains several pictures of flares that Tom can use to compare with his observing experience. http://www.satobs.org/iridpix.html - Kurt |
#7
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"Tom Mosher" wrote in message
y.com... It could have been an Iridium flare. http://antwrp.gsfc.nasa.gov/apod/ap980402.html Tom Iridium flares aren't stationary. The OP described it as totally stationary. Assuming his observation was correct and it wasn't moving WRT the background stars, I'd have to vote for a meteor heading directly toward his viewing position. I've seen a few of those myself. nz |
#8
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Nick Zivanovic wrote:
"Tom Mosher" wrote in message y.com... It could have been an Iridium flare. http://antwrp.gsfc.nasa.gov/apod/ap980402.html Tom Iridium flares aren't stationary. The OP described it as totally stationary. Assuming his observation was correct and it wasn't moving WRT the background stars, I'd have to vote for a meteor heading directly toward his viewing position. I've seen a few of those myself. However, an Iridium low in the sky can be pretty stationary (so that you could miss the motion over a few seconds if there's not a nearby reference object), so those details are important. Bill Keel |
#9
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Dear rfdj.
Military laser experiment? Military Coded message? best Penny High altitude lightening? Airplane sweeping a light |
#10
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A week or two ago, while at the clubs observatory, a small group of us
seen a satellite flash and dim several times as it headed north. Each flash lasted only a split second and it was roughly 8 or so seconds between flashes. this could be what he saw, one flash of.... -- Michael A. Barlow Lat: 42:57:13.799N Lon: 77:13:29.039W "Paul Below" wrote in message ... On Sun, 13 Jul 2003 21:26:41 -0500, "Nick Zivanovic" wrote: Iridium flares aren't stationary Since sometimes they are only visible for a few seconds, they often appear stationary. I agree that often they have readily apparent motion. Paul Below Battle Point Astronomical Association Bainbridge Island, WA, USA http://bainbridgeisland.org/ritchieobs/ |
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