海角大神

Fireball lights up Russian sky

A blazing fireball appeared over the northern Murmansk region of Russia last week. Recorded with dashboard cameras, the explosion evokes the February 2013 meteorite explosion over the city of Chelyabinsk, which injured more than 1,200 people.

|
YouTube
A screen shot from a video showing a blazing fireball seen over the northern Murmansk region of Russia.

During the weekend, the witnessed a fireball that very briefly lit up the sky. No damages were reported.

The explosion, recorded by dashboard video cameras and posted on YouTube, is a grim reminder of what happened on February 2013, when a meteor strike over the city of Chelyabinsk injured more than 1,200.

"In one of the dashcam videos, the ," writes Alan Boyle聽of NBC News. "Such dashcam views helped researchers reconstruct the timeline for last year's Chelyabinsk explosion."

After watching the video of the fireball, Sergei Smirnov, chief researcher at聽the Pulkovo Astronomical Observatory near St. Petersburg, couldn鈥檛 establish the trajectory or the exact altitude of the meteor but, he said that reported The Moscow Times.

Also, the object seen was a meteor, not a meteorite, as its flight "ended in聽combustion" instead of a collision with the聽Earth, Dr. Smirnov told Interfax.

is a streak of light observed when a meteoroid, or a small particle from an asteroid or a comet enters the Earth and vaporizes. When a meteoroid survives the Earth's atmosphere and lands on its surface, it is called a meteorite.

But the Russian news outlet RT News reported Saturday that most observers believe that the object was ". Others speculated that the object may have been space debris, re-entering the atmosphere."

Russia's TV Tsentr television said the event was part of the annual Lyrid meteor shower and disintegrated before it could land on the Earth. The Lyrids, which usually peak on April 21-22, comes from the dust trail of Comet Thatcher.

"This month's Lyrid meteor shower peaks ," according to NASA. "Every year in late April Earth passes through a stream of debris from the old comet, which has been bringing Lyrid meteors to our planet for at least 2600 years. and disintegrate in a flurry of meteors.聽 Most years, the shower produces about 15 to 20 Lyrids per hour."

You've read  of  free articles. Subscribe to continue.
Real news can be honest, hopeful, credible, constructive.
What is the Monitor difference? Tackling the tough headlines 鈥 with humanity. Listening to sources 鈥 with respect. Seeing the story that others are missing by reporting what so often gets overlooked: the values that connect us. That鈥檚 Monitor reporting 鈥 news that changes how you see the world.
QR Code to Fireball lights up Russian sky
Read this article in
/Science/2014/0421/Fireball-lights-up-Russian-sky
QR Code to Subscription page
Start your subscription today
/subscribe