Those who looked out into the night sky in Southwestern Ontario on Friday night may have seen a shooting star, or as it is technically called, a fireball firing across the sky.
This event was captured by several full-sky meteor cameras belonging to NASA’s All Sky Fire Network and the Southern Ontario Meteor Network, operated by Western University.
Peter Brown, Professor and Professor of Canadian Research at the Western Institute of Meteor Physics for Earth & Space Exploration, announced on Twitter that the fireball was as bright as the moon and passed directly over Chatham, Ont.
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He said the incident occurred Friday at 10:07 pm and the fireball ended at an altitude of 30 km just north of Lake St. Louis. Claire near Fair Haven, Michigan.
In a tweet, he wrote “meteorites with little or no appearance.”
According to NASA, the video data show that the meteor appeared 90 kilometers above Erieau on the northern shore of Lake Erie and moved northwest at a speed of 105,800 kilometers per hour, crossing the border of the USA / Canada before grinding over Fair Haven, Michigan.
NASA reports that the meteor was apparently caused by a fragment of the Jupiter family comet, although asteroidal origin is also possible.
The space agency believes that the brightest fire brightness combined with the distance means that any chip would be at least two kilograms and about five inches in size.
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