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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsPossible Meteor sighting in San Diego -
At 2000 PDT (8:00 pm Pacific for you non military clock readers) pretty much on the dot, we were driving facing pretty much directly east when this ball of green came straight down from about 60 degrees above the horizon to about 10 degrees above the horizon. It was either splitting up as it was coming down into a main and a smaller one, or it was two rocks.
Pretty big, too. So it was either small and close or middling and higher up/further away.
But it was definitely green, whatever it was. Laz and I said it at the same time.
So...be careful buying succulent plants over the next couple weeks.
Haele
usonian
(10,072 posts)I saw one a while back while driving. But I had a decent memory of it, and my report fit in with others, which was pretty cool.
LeftInTX
(25,910 posts)ETA: I found many more from 8 pm
Maybe someone caught it on camera
haele
(12,713 posts)I reported it. Looks like they have a good database collection for it.
It was really quite a pretty green. And quite large, if it was that far away.
Haele
LeftInTX
(25,910 posts)usonian
(10,072 posts)Surveillance cameras all over!
They're always on.
PCIntern
(25,688 posts)RKP5637
(67,112 posts)chouchou
(665 posts)Perhaps they've come for Donny Boy. The pipes, the pipes are calling. (I wish)
RipVanWinkle
(239 posts)greet them with Jolan tru and offer them some soup.
chouchou
(665 posts)canetoad
(17,221 posts)The green comet 12P/Pons-Brooks is now visible in the night sky in North America. Here's how to see it.
A rare, formerly-horned comet that astronomers have dubbed the "Mother of Dragons" is now visible after dusk in the Northern Hemisphere.
This "Halley-type" comet, officially known as Comet 12P/Pons-Brooks, completes a single orbit around the sun once every 71 years. The last time it passed by Earth was in 1954, according to a statement from the European Space Agency (ESA).
The city-size comet has a nucleus measuring 10.5 miles (17 kilometers) wide and orbits the sun in an elliptical shape. Recent observations of the comet have revealed a hidden spiral of light surrounding its frigid heart.
Like most comets, 12P/Pons-Brooks is composed of ice, dust and rock and its head also has a green appearance. This is due to comets containing diatomic carbon molecules duos of carbon atoms stuck together that emit emerald light when exposed to the sun.
https://www.livescience.com/space/comets/explosive-green-mother-of-dragons-comet-now-visible-in-the-northern-hemisphere
William Seger
(10,794 posts)Also, 12P/Pons-Brooks is very dim now -- you'd need binoculars or a telescope under dark skies to see it.
canetoad
(17,221 posts)I really didn't think about it hard enough, but your comments are obvious.
William Seger
(10,794 posts)I've only seen one, but it wasn't a fireball.
LeftInTX
(25,910 posts)BigmanPigman
(51,717 posts)in the area of San Diego. Someone posted a dash cam video.
Aren't scientists supposed to be aware of this stuff before it is sighted? Does it have to be a certain size?
LeftInTX
(25,910 posts)There was a huge one that hit Russia in 2013. It created sonic booms, broke windows and caused injuries.
BigmanPigman
(51,717 posts)It almost looks like a missile. If I saw it that in person it is what I would have initially thought.
Here is a stupid question... the asteroid that hit near the Yucatan peninsula was big enough to hit the planet and cause a giant soot cloud around the globe. If one were that big in 2024 would scientists be able to detect it before it hits the ground?
LeftInTX
(25,910 posts)They do research on near-earth objects to prevent such catastrophes, so hopefully they have the technology. The meteor from Russia was the size of a truck. .
BigmanPigman
(51,717 posts)Hopefully, scientists will be able to detect one similar in size.
Polybius
(15,575 posts)Knowing that we're gonna die? I honestly don't think we could stop it unless we predicted it years in advance.
BigmanPigman
(51,717 posts)They always have some solution like blowing it up before it hits the planet. Personally, if there is something coming in my direction I want a direct hit on my city so I die right away instead of suffering for any length of time.
Polybius
(15,575 posts)But it would have to be done well in advance, and very far away with some powerful nukes. But not one that's more 6 miles, that's huge. It might not budge with 100 nukes.
Here's an interesting article:
https://science.howstuffworks.com/nature/natural-disasters/asteroid-hits-earth.htm
BigmanPigman
(51,717 posts)that would die as a result. Humans are a lost cause as far as I am concerned.
Sympthsical
(9,209 posts)It would have been visible in the sky to the naked eye for a few days before impact, growing bigger and bigger. But our modern NASA would've seen it ages off. It was chilling around dipping into our orbit regularly for millions of years before gravity finally got it just so. We would've been tracking it like we do other near-Earth objects now (and a six mile asteroid is super visible to our technology that close).
The good news is, we know where most of the dangerous asteroids around the Earth are and none of them are predicted to smack us any time soon. Last I saw, it was something like 90% estimated found, tracked, and orbits calculated.
Our real problem is the Oort cloud. There could be asteroids or comets with high eccentricity that only come around every few hundred or thousand years. By the time we saw something really damaging coming, not much to be done for it.
But we are on it as much as one can be: https://science.nasa.gov/planetary-defense
All that said. There's always a chance some random ass asteroid that could go off like a nuke might pop in out of nowhere. Very, very small chance, but not non-zero.
Tommy Carcetti
(43,235 posts)It was the craziest thing. I didnt hear any impact but I certainly saw it in the air.
haele
(12,713 posts)About grape sized, and by most reports, it burned up over Arizona. Even though it was also seen in Colorado.
Haele
MineralMan
(146,364 posts)4 A.M. I was driving from the central coast to San Diego and back that day, so I left very early. Not 10 minutes after I started driving, I saw the green fireball cross the sky in front of me, headed out over the Pacific ocean. Very bright. Seemed to be moving slowly, but probably was very high and moving fast.
Fascinating. At that time in the morning in that area there were probably very few people out, so I never heard any reports on it. Very impressive, though.
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