[meteorite-list] VideoAtlantans see a visitor from Mars

John Teague volgems at icx.net
Thu Sep 1 11:06:17 EDT 2011


Anita!

You know ... if you snooze, you lose! ... right?

There will be enough time for sleeping when you're dead! ;-p

Also, you KNOW that you have true "Dream Job", right?  If I lived closer I would be doing volunteer work there (don't think that they would ever get desperate enough to hire me for pay!)!

John

-----Original Message-----
>From: Anita Westlake <anitawestlake at att.net>
>Sent: Sep 1, 2011 10:05 AM
>To: John Teague <volgems at icx.net>, Meteorite List <meteorite-list at meteoritecentral.com>
>Subject: Re: [meteorite-list] VideoAtlantans see a visitor from Mars
>
>That's where I work! (Except it's called Tellus Science Museum, not "Center")
>Too bad I was home, asleep at the time.
>Anita
>
>
>
>________________________________
>From: John Teague <volgems at icx.net>
>To: Meteorite List <meteorite-list at meteoritecentral.com>
>Sent: Thu, September 1, 2011 9:49:40 AM
>Subject: [meteorite-list] VideoAtlantans see a visitor from Mars
>
>Video from Tellus Museum skycam and interview at:
>
>http://duluth.11alive.com/news/news/79929-atlantans-see-visitor-mars
>
>
>CARTERSVILLE, Ga -- If you were awake at about 4:00am Sunday and you were 
>outside looking up, you may have seen a bright meteor flash across the sky. It 
>happens all the time but not from where the meteor came from.
>
>The meteor was captured from a roof top camera on top of the Tellus Science 
>Center in Cartersville. The fish-eye lens camera monitors the skies for NASA. 
>Its part of a study NASA is doing on astronaut safety. They are studying the 
>dangers debris in space poses to astronauts.
>
>So why was this particular meteor more interesting than others? "It was very 
>bright and fireballs that bright are somewhat unusual for us to see," said 
>Tellus Astronomy Program Manager David Dundee.
>
>What makes it even more spectacular is the trajectory of where it came from. 
>Astronomers determined it came from Mars and lit up the sky over Atlanta, 
>traveling from Duluth to just south of Jonesboro before it dissipated 21 miles 
>above the earth's surface.
>
>Dundee said it traveled 47 miles in a momentary flash of light. "Either the 
>object came from debris near Mars, like from asteroids running into each other 
>or something blasted off the surface of Mars," he said.
>
>Dundee said it's not unusual for meteors to flash across the skies of Atlanta. 
>He said Tellus' camera sees about six to eight every night. What's different 
>about Sunday's meteor is its brightness and where it came from. Usually meteors 
>come from the asteroid belt.
>
>As bright as it was, Dundee said the meteor was only about an inch across. "And 
>you say an inch across? Why is it so bright? Well, it entered the atmosphere 
>going over 52 thousand miles per hour," Dundee said.
>
>A piece of debris from Mars flew over Atlanta for all of us to see and study.
>
>
>
>______________________________________________
>Visit the Archives at http://www.meteoritecentral.com/mailing-list-archives.html
>Meteorite-list mailing list
>Meteorite-list at meteoritecentral.com
>http://six.pairlist.net/mailman/listinfo/meteorite-list
>






More information about the Meteorite-list mailing list