[meteorite-list] Daytime Fireball Seen Over Thailand

Ron Baalke baalke at zagami.jpl.nasa.gov
Mon Sep 7 12:41:25 EDT 2015


http://bangkokpost.com/news/general/683596/fireball-hurtles-over-thailand

Fireball hurtles over Thailand
Bangkok Post
September 7, 2015

[Image]
Image captured from a video clip uploaded on YouTube by user Porjai Jaturongkhahun, 
who said the fireball was seen on Sept 7 at 8.41am, and videos from an 
outbound lane on Ngam Wong Wan road.
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A large, bright fireball was seen streaking across the northern sky of 
Bangkok about 8.40am on Monday, leaving a trail of smoke, with sightings 
also reported in Korat and Kanchanaburi.

Excited netizens immediately began posting messages, photographs and video 
on social media.

In Bangkok reports came from many different localities, including the 
Khlong Tan intersection, Phetchaburi road, Victory Monument and Vibhavadi 
Ransit, Rama 9, Sukhumvit and Rama 4 roads.

Netizens in Kanchanaburi in the western part of the country also said 
they also saw the flaming object pass over.

The Kanchanaburi  deputy governor said there was no report of a helicopter 
or aircraft crashed in the province. He assumed the light was the same 
fireball seen over Bangkok.

There were also reports on Twitter that the fireball was seen over Nakhon 
Ratchasima about the same time.

Jor Sor 100 radio cited an astronomer in reporting that the fireball might 
be a meteor streaking down through the atmosphere.

An official at the Bangkok Planetarium, however, said there had been no 
reports of a meteorite landing. Most meteors completely burn up in the 
atmosphere. If one did crash to earth, it would probably be noticed, he 
said.

What was seen across the sky this morning could be a burning balloon, 
the official suggested

However, information on the website satview.org suggested the flaming 
object was space debris falling back to earth.

Space junk Flock 1B-11 object number 40459U was due to burn through the 
atmosphere on its way to earth about that time, according to the website. 
http://www.satview.org/?sat_id=40459U

Saran Poshyachina, the deputy director of the National Astronomical Research 
Institute of Thailand, said the fireball could be a meteorite landing. 
But he also did not rule out the possibility it could be space junk.

Video clips and other evidence sent to the institute had been closely 
examined. It was believed the fireball was 80 to 120 kilometres above 
the earth, as it could be seen from many areas of Thailand.

"It was almost certainly a good-sized rock burning up in our atmosphere," 
Phil Plait, a former member of NASA's Hubble Space Telescope Team and 
science popularizer, told dpa.

"It only took two seconds or so for it to go from being visible to it 
flaring as it disintegrated. It may have had a steep angle of entry."


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