Meteor Over Manhattan: East Coast Fireball Sets Internet Abuzz
Tariq Malik, SPACE.com
Published: Mar 23, 2013, 9:39 AM EDT
From our partners
East Coast Fire Ball
Autoplay
On
Off
(PHOTOS: Meteor Strikes Russia)
"Strange Friday night … a meteor passed over my house tonight!" wrote one New Yorker writing as Yanksmom19.
The first fireball sightings came at about 8 p.m. EDT and sparked more than 500 witness reports to the American Meteor Society. Reports of the meteor flooded Twitter from New York, Boston and Washington, D.C.
YouTube Screenshot
Snowbound posted it on YouTube, saying the video was shared on his Facebook page by Kim Fox.
In New York, some observers reported seeing the meteor low in the sky as it streaked from west to east across the night sky.
(WATCH: Baby Pictures of the UNIVERSE?!)
"It shot over Manhattan and broke up over the East Village," observer Ross E. of New York City wrote in his fireball report to the meteor society. In fact, the meteor streaked across hundreds of miles and was visible from many states along the Eastern Seaboard.
According to Lunsford, meteors often appear closer than they actually are due to the observer's perspective.
Fireballs occur every day and are typically caused by small space rocks about the size of a basketball disintegrating as they streak through Earth's atmosphere, officials with NASA's Asteroid Watch outreach program wrote in a Twitter post.
(VIDEO: See the Incredible Northern Lights)
On Feb. 15, a bus-size meteor exploded over Russia near the city of Chelyabinsk, shattering windows in hundreds of buildings and injuring nearly 1,500 people. That rare meteor explosion, which scientists have classified as a superbolide, was the most powerful in more than a century, NASA scientists said.
The Earth is bombarded by nearly 100 tons of material from space every day, but most of those objects are tiny dust grains that burn up harmlessly in the atmosphere.
NASA scientists and astronomers around the world regularly monitor the night sky for signs of larger asteroids that could pose an impact threat to Earth. Friday night's meteor came just days after back-to-back hearings in the House and Senate about the dangers posed by near-Earth asteroids.
No comments:
Post a Comment