"I MISSED IT!!"

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azsnowman
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"I MISSED IT!!"

#1 Postby azsnowman » Tue Oct 03, 2006 6:58 am

DANG IT....I missed the SHOW :x saw a video on the news about this last night....it was HUGE!!!!

http://www.azcentral.com

Arizonans bedazzled by meteor

JJ Hensley and Senta Scarborough
The Arizona Republic
Oct. 3, 2006 12:00 AM


It was a plane going down. It was a helicopter's searchlight. It was a large piece of space junk.

Wrong, wrong and wrong, astronomers say. That celestial body that flashed across the Arizona sky after 10 p.m. Sunday was likely a fireball, an extremely bright meteor.

Whatever you want to call it, the brief encounter with the unidentified flying object made for an unforgettable minute for witnesses from Tucson to Snowflake. advertisement




"It was a once-in-a-lifetime experience for both of us," said Scottsdale resident Kip Wachter, who saw the fireball as he walked with his wife, Valerie, near Pinetop-Lakeside on Sunday night. Wachter described a fireball with bright green, red and white colors that made a low swishing sound, like a hot-air balloon, when it moved overhead.

"It was pretty impressive," Ahwatukee resident Jeff Hartman said of the fast-moving object. "It was probably moving about the width of a human hand per second across the sky."

Eyewitness accounts were enough to prompt Rural/Metro Fire Department staff to search for downed aircraft north of Saguaro Lake, but searches found no evidence of an accident.

Scottsdale resident Dennis Alonso said the event was awe-inspiring.

"Both of us were talking and just went silent the whole time this thing was in the sky, like we couldn't believe what we were seeing," Alonso said.

Those who caught Sunday night's show should consider themselves lucky, said Robert Lunsford, operations manager with the American Meteor Society.

Lunsford said he regularly gets reports from eyewitnesses to similar events from rural and urban areas around the country, but it still takes good timing to see the spectacle in person.

So many people reported Sunday evening's incident because it occurred early enough for witnesses to be out and about.

Sunday's presumed fireball also was larger and closer to the ground, maybe as low as 50 miles up, for Arizonans to witness the flight path instead of the more common meteors called shooting stars.

Many witnesses Sunday night reported an object that seemed to disappear just over the horizon.

That was the assumption in the early 1960s when air-traffic controllers at Sky Harbor International Airport contacted Carlton Moore, former director of Arizona State's Center for Meteorite Studies, to report a meteor that appeared to go down in north Phoenix.

"By the time I tracked it down, it was seen just north of Calgary, Alberta," Moore said.

Wherever the fireball lands, Robert Ward and his meteor-hunting pals from Arizona will be on a quest to find it.

Ward and his two partners were in Norway in August and found fragments from the Moss Meteorite. The meteor burned through the atmosphere and scattered through a Nordic village in July.

Ward said that once crew members get good eyewitness statements from multiple states that allow them to estimate the object's flight path, they embark on a mission for bits and pieces that fall from the fireball's tail as it hurtles toward the ground.

"Normally, the smaller pieces fall first and the bigger pieces fall further down the path. If you find a small piece, keep moving in that direction," Ward said. "I would expect something pretty decent to come out of this."

For good reason.

Sightings of Sunday's fireball were reported in Arizona, New Mexico and Colorado.

Although witnesses to these cosmic events may seem rare, finding actual space rock in the ground is rarer. A 0.945-ounce fragment from the Norway find can fetch over $5,000 from collectors.
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azsnowman
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#2 Postby azsnowman » Tue Oct 03, 2006 7:03 am

Here's yet ANOTHER ARTICLE....I musta REALLY missed something :cry:

http://www.azcentral.com

Giant meteor sails over Saguaro Lake

Senta Scarborough and JJ Hensley
The Arizona Republic
Oct. 2, 2006 10:48 AM


Residents who saw a ball of fire in the sky late Sunday evening near Saguaro Lake witnessed a giant meteor, officials said.

Phoenix and Scottsdale police and Rural/Metro Fire Department dispatchers received calls from residents reporting a plane going down in "a ball of fire." Another caller reported seeing a meteor.

"It was a large ball of flame," Rural/Metro Fire Department spokeswoman Alison Cooper said. "It was very large. It was seen as far as Washington state." advertisement




Kip and Valerie Wachter saw the fireball pass over their heads about 10:15 Sunday evening as they walked north of Pinetop.

"The colors were a bright green, red, white. The size was about three times wider than its length. It seemed to emanate a low, soft swishing sound as it passed overhead," the Wachters wrote in an e-mail to The Republic.

Steve Kates, a Chandler resident and science journalist known as "Dr. Sky," said that description, particularly the noise, was consistent with meteoric activity.

Most meteors visible on earth occur high in the atmosphere and these "shooting stars" are about the size of a grain of dust, said Jeffrey Hall, associate director at the Lowell Observatory in Flagstaff.

"The great majority are these tiny particles moving through the atmosphere at a high rate of speed," Hall said. "Larger ones tend to be moving more slowly and produce a much larger trail through the sky."

Between 10 and 50 meteor events occur over the Earth each day, according to the American Meteor Society, with the vast majority happening over oceans and out of eyesight. Meteors lose mass and decelerate as they enter the atmosphere, with only the largest slamming into the Earth and forming a crater. Scientists think the Barringer Crater, near Winslow, was formed by an iron meteor about 50,000 years ago.

Kates said a meteorite the size of a human fist could have created the light show West Coast residents witnessed Sunday night.

Rural/Metro responded to the north side of Saguaro Lake but found no sign of damage or destruction from a plane crash, Cooper said. Witnesses reported seeing the meteor travel from southwest to northeast.

Hall said the meteor likely never made it to the ground.

"This is not like a mountain coming into the atmosphere. It's more like the size of a softball," Hall said. "Even something this bright probably burned up completely in the atmosphere."

If you saw the meteor or have photos of it, call reporter JJ Hensley at (602) 444-7964 or e-mail him at jj.hensley@arizonarepublic.com
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#3 Postby JenBayles » Tue Oct 03, 2006 7:34 am

How cool! Dave and I saw a bollide like that a few years ago out in the middle of nothing between Austin and Houston. It really is a once in a lifetime experience and the colors are gorgeous.
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azsnowman
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#4 Postby azsnowman » Tue Oct 03, 2006 8:00 pm

It was supposed to be SPECTACULAR, I saw a video on the news of it on Monday :(
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#5 Postby JonathanBelles » Tue Oct 03, 2006 8:03 pm

do you have a link to the video?
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azsnowman
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#6 Postby azsnowman » Tue Oct 03, 2006 10:18 pm

fact789 wrote:do you have a link to the video?


NO I don't :cry: I'm sure if you Google it for any Phoenix news channels you might find one....try NBC, FOX, ABC and CBS affiliates out of Phoenix
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