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  #1 (permalink)  
Old 10-08-2008, 07:55 PM
Lydia Dustbin
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Default Meteor or what?

Bear with me; I do not understand astronomical mapping terms.
..
Yesterday, 7th Oct 08. Wolverhampton/Dudley border 21:05 approx, facing
east. A very bright, and far larger light than I thought anything had a
right to be, went streaking from the south east (Birmingham direction) and
away to the north (over Wolverhampton) in a position I can only say was
closer to chimneypots than zenith.
The whole thing took about two seconds.
All I have seen before is in typical meteor showers, being fine streaks,
but this was rather larger than a streak and left a fine 'tail' behind it -
or so it seemed.
..
Sorry to be so ruddy vague and pithering, but how can I find out if anyone
else saw anything of a similar nature?
And can anyone hazard a guess at what it was?
..
V Leach


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  #2 (permalink)  
Old 10-08-2008, 08:50 PM
Dr J R Stockton
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Default Meteor or what?

On Oct 8, 7:55*pm, "Lydia Dustbin" <marrowjam@[wild]blueyonder.co.uk>
wrote:



<http://www.imo.net/calendar/2008#gia> - A Draconid? But Draco was
more to the North (I don't know quote where the radiant is). It
sounds much too fast for a re-entry. A sporadic meteor?

--
(c) John Stockton, near London, UK. Posting with Google.
Mail: J.R.""""""""@physics.org or (better) via Home Page at
Web: <URL:http://www.merlyn.demon.co.uk/>
FAQish topics, acronyms, links, etc.; Date, Delphi, JavaScript, ....|
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  #3 (permalink)  
Old 10-10-2008, 11:26 AM
Lydia Dustbin
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Default Meteor or what?


"Dr J R Stockton" <[Registered users can see links. ]> wrote in message
news:64ef73b7-9bee-41e8-b672-



<http://www.imo.net/calendar/2008#gia> - A Draconid? But Draco was
more to the North (I don't know quote where the radiant is). It
sounds much too fast for a re-entry. A sporadic meteor?
..
8) I dread to think what one of those is. I Googled about a bit and found
this site which cheers me up. Now I am wondering what happened after it
passed over Wolverhampton.
[Registered users can see links. ]
..
Thank you for your suggestion, anyway. At least now I know things larger
than a streak can be seen without people telling you to get your eyes
tested.
..
VL.


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  #4 (permalink)  
Old 10-11-2008, 12:47 AM
newshound
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Default Meteor or what?


"Lydia Dustbin" <marrowjam@[wild]blueyonder.co.uk> wrote in message
news:b5GHk.69729$[Registered users can see links. ].virginmedia.c om...
I've been interested in astronomy since I could read. When I was perhaps
ten, having seen two comets and Sputniks 2 and 3 but before I had ever
positively seen a meteor, I saw a bright and irregular object comparable in
angular size to the moon moving over several degrees in a second or two.
Knowing for sure that there was nothing celestial which could fit that
description, I thought for decades I must have imagined it. Very much later
I read that fireballs can be bright enough to overload the retina and appear
to be very much larger than their true angular dimension. Sounds like your
experience was something similar.


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  #5 (permalink)  
Old 10-11-2008, 01:20 PM
Lydia Dustbin
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Default Meteor or what?


"newshound" <[Registered users can see links. ].uk> wrote in message
news:[Registered users can see links. ]...
..
Oh yes... head up and eyes squinty watching the faint dot over Birmingham.
8)
..
but before I had ever
I wouldn't be at all surprised being as I am in my mid sixties and have lost
a bit of night vision. It certainly wasn't as large as the moon, though.
Just 'slightly larger' than I thought a meteor should be?
..
I deeply regret to inform you that the only other thing I have seen 'up
there' was a bright green cigar during daylight hours and experience has
taught me not to boast about that baby. I put it down to a ball of light and
certainly nothing ET about it.
..
Ah well. I dare say I can go for the rest of my life without seeing anything
else untowards.
Meanwhile, happy star-watching to the rest of you. I am terribly impressed
by your photographs.
..
VL


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  #6 (permalink)  
Old 10-12-2008, 04:28 AM
David Entwistle
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Default Meteor or what?

In message <b5GHk.69729$[Registered users can see links. ].virginmedia.com >, Lydia
Dustbin <marrowjam@[wild].invalid> writes

Lydia,

The SPA's Recent Fireball web page has now been updated to include your
report along with several other fireballs reported to the section in
early October.

<http://www.popastro.com/sections/meteor/fireball_sightings.htm>

--
David Entwistle
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  #7 (permalink)  
Old 10-12-2008, 08:38 AM
Lydia Dustbin
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Default Meteor or what?


"David Entwistle" <[Registered users can see links. ]> wrote in message
news:[Registered users can see links. ].com...

Oh, thank you! I am so glad someone else saw it!
I am afraid that wasn't 'my' report. I took one look at the instructions and
fainted clear away.
..
VL.


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