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Related: About this forumAstronomers confirm 1,300-kilometre-long fireball grazed Earth and bounced off into space
Astronomers confirm 1,300-kilometre-long fireball grazed Earth and bounced off into space
Astronomers confirmed that a meteoroid hit Earth and created a massive fireball before returning to space
By Carlo Inigo Monzon
Updated December 17, 2019 15:47 +08
Astronomers from Australia confirmed that a meteoroid hit Earth in 2017 and created a huge fireball in the sky. However, instead of exploding in the atmosphere or hitting the ground, the space rock was hurled away from the planet and returned to space.
According to the astronomers, the fireball incident occurred in July 2017. It was detected by a series of meteoroid-hunting cameras in Australia known as the Desert Fireball Network. Using the data collected by the cameras, the astronomers were able to discover what happened to the space rock.
The Grazing Fireball
Meteorite (Representational picture) Pixabay
As noted by the astronomers, the meteoroid hit Earth and grazed its atmosphere at a speed of almost 16 kilometres per second. Data shows that it penetrated the atmosphere within a depth of about 58 kilometres. Due to the friction from the atmosphere, the meteoroid started to burn up until it became a huge fireball that left a blazing trail of almost 1,300 kilometres long.
The entire incident lasted for about 90 seconds. During this time, the fireball began to slow down. Based on its initial speed and size of the fireball, the astronomers estimated that the meteoroid was about 30 centimetres long and weighed around 60 kilograms. They believe it came from the asteroid belt between Mars and Jupiter.
More:
https://www.ibtimes.sg/astronomers-confirm-1300-kilometer-long-fireball-grazed-earth-bounced-off-into-space-36124
Thekaspervote
(32,778 posts)empedocles
(15,751 posts)samnsara
(17,622 posts)lordsummerisle
(4,651 posts)The object was 30 centimeters long and left a trail 1300 km long. It wasn't a 1300 km object as the title suggests...