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Signs In The Sun, The
Moon and The Stars
Great New Mexico Fireball
On Sept. 13th a remarkable fireball split the
skies over New Mexico. Witnesses say it "turned night into day" and
reminded them of a full Moon hurtling across the sky. In fact, it was
brighter than a full Moon. At least two all-sky cameras captured the
event while one amateur astronomer recorded radio echoes from the
fireball's ionized trail.
On Sept 13th at approximately 3 o'clock in the morning MDT, an
extremely bright fireball streaked over New Mexico, "It was
terrifying," says eyewitness Susan K. Burgess. "I was stargazing
outside my house near Santa Fe when the landscape started becoming very
bright, as if a brilliant full moon was quickly rising from the
southwest. The fireball itself [slowly moved] over the house and
disintegrated with a great deal of scatter in the northwest sky."
At the Sandia National Labs in Albuquerque, a Sentinel all-sky video
camera captured the fireball in flight:
Based on data from the video, the visual magnitude of the fireball was
-14.6, about four times brighter than a full Moon!
"The fireball was a pure emerald green, uncomfortably bright to look
at," adds Harald Edens located in the Magdalena Mountains west of
Socorro, NM. "The object was disintegrating when I saw it, with pieces
parallel-tracking and trailing the fireball. Those smaller pieces had
all different colors--most notably red. I think it has been a piece of
space junk."
Amateur radio astronomer Thomas Ashcraft not only photographed the
fireball, but also recorded echos of a distant radio station bouncing
off the meteor's ionized trail: movie.
"This fireball turned night into day!" he says.