"The entire landscape lit up,"
she continues. "I spun around and there it
was, a huge, bright green light, streaking across
the sky. Even when it was gone, there was still
a bright line in the sky about 20 seconds later.
We were all stunned."
A NASA all-sky camera in Hiram, Ohio,
also recorded the fireball: movie.
"This was a very bright event,"
says Bill Cooke of NASA's Meteoroid Environment
Office. "Flares saturated our meteor cameras,
and made determination of the end point (the terminus
of the fireball's flight through the atmosphere)
virtually impossible. Judging from the brightness,
we are dealing with a meter class object."
Data from multiple cameras shows that
the meteoroid hit Earth's atmosphere traveling 51
km/s (114,000 mph) and passed almost directly over
Columbus, Ohio. Cooke has prepared a preliminary
map of the ground track. According to the American
Meteor Society, the fireball was visible from at
least 14 US states. Source:
http://www.spaceweather.com/
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