Source

There are increasing meteor reports recently all over the world. More debris from the Px tail...

ZetaTalk: Live Chat, written November 21, 2009

"When the debris from the tail of Planet X first started arriving in ernest, in 2004, the establishment chose to call this space junk. When the public became alarmed at the amount of space junk falling to Earth they tried to enhance the story by claiming that two satellites had crashed into each other, but this just made a bad story worse. Since fireballs have not gone away, but continued apace and if anything gotten worse, a new term has been used - asteroids. This is debris in the tail of Planet X, which is increasingly turning toward the Earth, hosed out from the N Pole of Planet X. This is why the wobble has gotten more violent, why electromagnetic disruption of dams and airplanes has occurred, and why blackouts will become more frequent. There will also be displays in the sky, some of which has already been noticed, from the electromagnetic tides assaulting the Earth's atmosphere. Stay tuned, more to come!"

March 3, 2012

Reports of a "bright light" and an "orange glow" were received by police across Scotland and the north of England around 9.40pm.

The Met Office tweeted: "Hi All, for anyone seeing something in the night sky, we believe it was a meteorite."

A spokesman for Strathclyde Police said the force had been "inundated" with calls about a bright object in the sky across the west of Scotland. A Durham Police spokeswoman said a number of calls came in around 9.45pm from concerned members of public who had seen a "bright light or a fire in the sky" and believed it may have been incidents involving an aircraft. "

It has been confirmed with air traffic control that there are no incidents of aircraftin difficult and nothing registered on radar," she said. "

The sightings are believed to be either an asteroid burning out or similar which has been restricted to the upper atmosphere only." Grampian Police said reports of people seeing a "flare or a bright object with a tail" were received from across the region. And Dumfries and Galloway Constabulary said numerous calls were made about a "large ball of fire in the sky" across Annandale and Eskdale.

One user wrote on the force's Facebook page: "It was awesome to see! Really big and bright!" Hundreds of people took to Twitter to report similar sightings across Scotland and the north of England. People described seeing a bright fireball moving across the sky with a large tail.

The Kielder Observatory also reported the sighting of a "huge fireball" travelling from north to south over Northumberland at 9.41pm. The Observatory posted on Twitter: "Of 30 years observing the sky #fireball best thing I have ever seen period."

LINEAR INCREASE OF FIREBALL EVENTS SINCE 2010

Source

What a Meteor Looks Like

Source

What a Large Daytime Fireball Looks Like

Chelyabinsk Fireball (2013)

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Comment by Mark on December 19, 2015 at 9:11am

Fireball streaks across sky above greater Chattanooga area

http://www.timesfreepress.com/news/local/story/2015/dec/18/fireball...

NASA reports a bright fireball occurred over Georgia at 6:33 p.m. Thursday. It could be spotted from Chattanooga and across much of the Southeast.

All six NASA sky meteor cameras in the region picked up the meteor at an altitude of 50 miles above the town of McDonough, NASA said. From its brightness, it is estimated that this piece of an asteroid weighed at least 150 pounds and was over 16 inches in diameter.

"It entered the atmosphere at a steep angle (16 degrees from vertical) and moved almost due south at a speed of 29,000 miles per hour," NASA stated.

The NASA cameras tracked it to an altitude of 17 miles above the town of Locust Grove, where it had slowed to a speed of 9000 miles per hour, at which point the meteor ceased producing light by burning up.

It is possible that fragments of the object survived to reach the ground as meteorites; If so, they are located in Henry County south of Locust Grove, or in the counties adjacent to this area.

Comment by M. Difato on December 15, 2015 at 4:52pm

Meteor fireball leaves huge plume as it streaks across Swedish skies - 14th December 2015
Raw video of something in the sky over Stockholm, Sweden! (Ball of fire? Jet stream?) Will update with more information if it becomes available. Video taken on 2015-12-14 in Stockholm, Sweden. *** Excuse the shakiness of the video, I was not expecting to see this 'fireball' at all and was quite taken by surprise.

Time of occurrence: around 14:36 (02:36 PM)
Source:
http://www.sott.net/article/308508-Meteor-fireball-leaves-huge-plum...

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7N2B7Z1xB3E

Posted kootallica Youtube Mon, 14 Dec 2015 10:00 UTC

Comment by Mark on December 9, 2015 at 7:59pm

Fireball lights up the sky above Nova Scotia

http://www.theweathernetwork.com/news/articles/fireball-lights-up-t...

Tuesday, December 8, 2015, 5:51 PM - Astrophotographer Michael Boschat has been studying the night sky for nearly 60 years and over the weekend, he managed to capture a once-in-a-lifetime shot.

Two fireballs lit up the sky over Nova Scotia on Sunday around 6 p.m., just as Boschat was setting up his camera and telescope from his home in Halifax, the CBC reports.

He was able to capture an image of the streaks, which were only visible in the sky for about 10 seconds, moments before they vanished out of sight.

Boschat, who is a member of the Royal Astronomical Society of Canada, emailed the picture to the group. One of the members works at NASA's Ames Research Centre and confirmed the streaks of light were the first stage of an Atlas V rocket that was launched from Cape Canaveral, Florida to send the Cygnus spacecraft to the International Space Station (ISS).

Boschat said the fireballs may have looked like meteors to a casual observer, but "you'd never see fireballs travelling sort of parallel to each other, even during a meteor shower," he told the CBC.

"I was pretty happy, kind of lucky," he said of his photograph.

Comment by M. Difato on December 9, 2015 at 6:39pm

Fireball Caught Live on WPRI-TV Sunday Morning December 6, 2015 

http://wpri.com/blog/2015/12/06/fireball-caught-live-on-wpri-tv-sun...

It was more a matter of luck than anything else, but it was an amazing 1-2seconds caught live on television Sunday morning at about 8:17AM.  A fireball raced across the deep blue sky over Providence, and I watched it as it happened.  Look just above the smoke stack about 3 seconds into the video.  To see the fireball, enlarge the video to fill your screen.

Our Hurricane Barrier Cam was pointed to the west.  For perspective, the I-Way Bridge is on the right, Rhode Island and Hasbro Children’s Hospitals are in the center of the screen.  I circled the streak of light in red below…you can see it behind the exhaust from the smoke stack.  In the inset, you can see the pieces of the burning debris that fell off of the object.

The fireball was very bright because I saw it within that bright blue sky.  If the sky was dark, thousands of people would have likely seen it.  If you saw it, let me know.  I’d love to know what you saw.

As the meteor fell through the sky, it burned up due to friction with the Earth’s atmosphere.  What was the object? That part is unknown.  It appeared to be moving from the northeast into the west.  That’s not a typical direction for a piece of space rock to create a ‘shooting star’.   It could have been a piece of space debris.  We’ll likely never know.  There is no indication the object hit the Earth.  -Meteorologist T.J. Del Santo

Comment by Starr DiGiacomo on December 1, 2015 at 11:14pm

http://www.bbc.com/news/uk-northern-ireland-34963892

Fireball spotted in skies above Armagh

A fireball was seen in the sky above Armagh on Sunday evening.

Mark Bailey, director at Armagh Observatory, said it could be seen from Letterkenny and Longford in the Republic as well as Scotland and Northern Ireland.

A fireball is a fragment of an asteroid or comet which emits a light as it burns up in the earth's atmosphere.

Mr Bailey said that the observatory received more than 30 submissions from the public detailing the sightings.

"It's very interesting to see what people do report," he said. "It's mostly people who have never seen such a bright object in the sky."

Mr Bailey said the reports from the public help the observatory to pinpoint the trajectory of the fireball.

Comment by Scott on November 22, 2015 at 7:09pm

Security Camera Films Meteor Streaking Across Ohio Sky
The spectacular display was seen from as far away as Wisconsin, Missouri and Michigan.
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/ohio-fireball-meteor_56516f6ce4...

... A meteor streaked across the Ohio night sky on Thursday -- and the spectacular sight was caught on surveillance camera. 

...

Some 77 people have reported seeing the same fireball to the American Meteor Society, according to the organization's website.

It was spotted across the Ohio area, with other sightings coming from as far away as Missouri, Kentucky, Wisconsin and Michigan. 

Cincinnati Observatory's Dean Regas, who saw the meteor from his backyard, told WLWT it was "one of the brightest I have ever seen." 

...

This latest fireball came the night after what had been expected to be the peak of the annual mid-November Leonid meteor shower.

The shower is made up of tiny sand-sized bits of debris and dust that crumble off the Tempel-Tuttle comet as it passes the Earth. The particles ignite when they hit our atmosphere, and usually put on quite a show.

This year's Leonid shower -- which was predicted to peak in the early hours of Tuesday and Wednesday morning -- was quieter than usual, however, with only an estimated 15 meteors streaking across the sky per hour, according to ABC News.

Comment by Howard on November 11, 2015 at 7:11pm

November Fireball Reports Triple in 2015 (Nov 11)

The American Meteor Society has logged a record number of fireball reports in the last two weeks. In the whole of 2015 there have been 472 unique fireball events witnessed by 5 or more people each. 172 of those have been logged in the last 11 days. That means 36% of the 2015 fireballs events with 5 or more witnesses have occurred in the last 11 days between November 1st and 11th.

When we look at significant events with 10 or more witnesses each, from October 30th – November 10th 2015, the AMS cataloged 44 events versus 14 in the same time period of 2014 — that is a 3 times increase year over year.

Its clear in the daily fireball reports graph above, that daily witness reports of fireball events have more than doubled, and stayed strong, since the beginning of the November.

Source

http://www.amsmeteors.org/2015/11/november-2015-fireball-surge/

Comment by M. Difato on November 11, 2015 at 4:49pm

 A green fireball lit up the whole sky then burned out.

https://www.pressandjournal.co.uk/fp/news/aberdeenshire/746660/pict...

 Posted November 9, 2015 by Andrew Douglas

An aurora-hunting north-east photographer has captured a stunning image of a meteorite fireball falling to earth.

Leigh-Ann Mitchell, from Ellon, had been out at the weekend scouring the night skies for any sign of the Northern Lights.

The self-proclaimed “aurora chaser” settled at Pitfour Estate in Mintlaw, where she thought she had the best chance of capturing the spectacular light show.

But the 40-year-old amateur snapper got more than she bargained for when she captured the moment a fireball from the Taurid meteor shower fell from the sky, combined with the heavenly aurora glow.

The shower is notorious for producing fireball flares, and experts said this year would be the best chance to witness them yet.

Mrs Mitchell’s photograph has been viewed thousands of times since it was taken in the very early hours of Saturday morning, and shared across social media in every corner of the globe.

Meteorologists across the world have also praised the stunning image, saying she captured a once-in-a-lifetime event.

She said it was a phenomenon she never expected to see, and that she had simply been in the right place at the right time.

“I’m a keen aurora chaser so I’m out with the camera at any opportunity,” she explained.

“I often visit Pitfour during the day as it’s a wonderful place with the camera. I checked recently with my phone compass what angle north would be over the lake with an aurora shot in mind.

“Myself and my husband are radio amateurs so we follow the space weather sites online and keep a keen eye on the data.

“Friday and Saturday were looking good so we headed up to Pitfour around 8.30pm, but nothing exciting was happening so we headed back home.

“More data came through around midnight so we headed back up around 12.30am to get some good colour from the aurora.

“I started shooting and from nowhere a bright streak of light came down over the lake in front of us and a green fireball lit up the whole sky then burned out.

“Thank goodness the camera was shooting a 30 second exposure and captured the shot.

“I guess we were in the right place at the right time.”

* Unable to post picture due to copyright, see photo here  http://www.sott.net/image/s14/280597/full/12236458_1020634424218395...

Comment by Howard on November 5, 2015 at 3:58pm

Fireballs Over Czech Republic (Nov 4)

There were almost a dozen exploding meteors--all brighter than Venus and one as bright as a crescent Moon. "It was a very active night," says Martin Popek of Nýdek (Czech republic) who activated a low-light camera in his backyard and let it run all night long.

"This is higher than usual activity," says meteor expert Peter Brown of the University of Western Ontario.

Sources

http://spaceweathergallery.com/indiv_upload.php?upload_id=119676

http://spaceweather.com/archive.php

Comment by Howard on November 3, 2015 at 3:38am

Fireball Over Northeast U.S. (Nov 1)

AMS has received over 100 reports of a bright fireball seen over the northeastern U.S. and Canada at 22:11 UTC.

Witness reports:

"Leading edge of fireball was blue, trailing tail was yellow/orange. Very bright, Very low, moving nearly horizontal, east to west."

"Probably the most incredible thing I've seen in the sky."

"This is the second one I saw in 4 days. The other one was twice as bright as Jupiter that morning and was almost straight down at 5:50 AM EST."

"I have seen many spectacular shooting/falling stars but this was definitely something else!"

Source

http://www.amsmeteors.org/members/imo_view/event/2015/2891

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