[meteorite-list] Bright Bolide Lights Up Night Over Over Washington State

Ron Baalke baalke at zagami.jpl.nasa.gov
Sun Dec 6 22:36:32 EST 2015


http://www.theprovince.com/life/exploding+meteor+bright+bolide+lights+friday+night+from+chilliwack+nanaimo+seattle/11567266/story.html

Exploding meteor: Bright bolide lights up Friday night sky from Chilliwack to Nanaimo to Seattle
By PATRICK JOHNSTON
The Province 
December 5, 2015
 
Tina Robertson was just trying to catch a stray cat out in front of her 
property when she heard it.

"It freaked me right out," she said.

Then she looked up to see a "big ball of fire."

"It was moving like hell," she said. "It was big, but not as big 
as that one in Russia."

What she and other witnesses as far afield as Seattle and Nanaimo seem 
to have seen around 6:50 p.m. Friday was a type of meteor known as a bolide. 
Bolides are as bright as a full moon; they're a meteor that doesn't 
just burn up as it travels through the atmosphere, it explodes.

(Hat tip to Seattle Twitter user Reb Roush for pointing us all to the 
term.)

Robertson's partner Wilf Krickhan was loading up firewood in a bobcat 
behind the house when he saw the blue-green bolide flash across the sky.

"It had an orange streak behind it," he said.

The couple live on a farm about 25 kilometres up Chilliwack Lake Road. 
>From their vantage point, it looked like the meteor flashed out up the 
slopes of Mount McGuire, in the direction of Vedder Road and the site 
of the former CFB Chilliwack.

Friday was the start of the Geminid meteor shower, so keep your eyes peeled 
at the sky for the next two weeks. The peak period will be on Dec. 13 
and 14.

People in Seattle saw a bright streak in the sky around the same time, 
and so did Andrew Arthur, who was driving south through Ladner on Highway 
17A.

"It was close: cloud level almost. Very bright," he told The Province 
via Twitter. "Burned up as it travelled southwest."

Across the Georgia Strait, Marc Kurtagic was out for an evening stroll 
when he spotted the bright light off in the eastern sky.

"It looked like a distant star at first, then became brighter, then 
produced a green glow with a bright tail," he said over Twitter. Like 
Robertson, he was reminded of the famous 2013 bolide, captured by video 
in Chelyabinsk, Russia, but agreed it was much smaller.

"What caught me with surprise was the speed of it. It looked like a 
plane approaching at night at first," he said.

As for Robertson's stray cat, she still hasn't caught it. She and Krickhan 
said people keep dropping off unwanted pets up their way and they wish 
the practice would stop. "It's heartbreaking," she said. 


More information about the Meteorite-list mailing list