December 12, 2013 -- Updated 0225 GMT (1025 HKT)
Possible meteor spotted in Arizona
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
- NEW: The largest meteor shower of the year, Geminid, is cranking up
- NEW: The Tucson meteor coincided with Geminid, but was not part of it
- A resounding boom over Tucson roused residents from their dinner tables Tuesday
- A dash cam caught the meteor on video
With the largest meteor
shower of the year around the corner, the heavens seemed to be giving
them a sneak preview. A whopper of a fireball roared over their heads
and exploded, rattling their houses.
A dash cam captured it on video as it vanished in a bright blaze.
The spectacular annual
Geminid meteor shower kicks into high gear Thursday night, NASA said,
and people around the world will be able to enjoy it.
Some of its meteors have already been dashing through Earth's atmosphere. The agency recorded nine of them Tuesday night.
But the Tucson meteor did
not appear to be one of them, said NASA meteor expert Bill Cooke, who
analyzed the flying space rock after two NASA cameras in Arizona
recorded it on video.
Traveling at 45,000 mph, it was too slow.
"A Geminid moves at 78,000 mph," he said. And the direction it came from was not typical for a meteor from the big shower.
The Arizona fireball was just one of the handful of "sporadic background" meteors that whiz through the atmosphere every day.
But this was a big one,
Cooke confirmed. It weighed about 100 pounds and was about 16 inches
thick. It made quite a bright flash, as it burned up in the atmosphere.
Even with 100 to 120
meteors per hour coming down during its peak on Friday and Saturday, the
Geminid shower now has a tough act to follow.
Kaboom!
Astronomer Tod Lauer heard the blast but did not bother to look outside.
"We were eating dinner
and heard a good bang that rattled the roof of our house. I dismissed it
as a sonic boom," he posted to Facebook.
He realized it had to be
more than that, when a local TV station phoned the scientist, who
studies images from the Hubble Space Telescope, to ask him to explain
what had happened.
Frantic eyewitnesses across the state called local news outlets to report what they saw.
The explosion shook Tony Kubrak's house, too, he told CNN affiliate KGUN, which received a flood of calls and hundreds of posts to its Facebook page.
Kubrak went outside to check it out.
"I see this tremendous,
white, bright light in the western sky. And it was just ... it was
absolutely enormous, I couldn't believe it."
Others took to social media.
"Did y'all see the
meteor that flew above Tucson? Crazzzzy. That was toooo craaaazy!"
Tucson resident Eric Gomez posted on Twitter.
Watch Geminid!
People around the world
can share some of the thrill that bedazzled Arizonans until at least
Monday, NASA said. The Geminid meteor shower will be "rich in fire
balls."
"Of all the debris
streams Earth passes through every year, the Geminids are by far the
most massive," he said. "When we add up the amount of dust in the
Geminid stream, it outweighs other streams by factors of 5 to 500."
NASA calls it the 900-pound gorilla of meteor showers.
Most meteor large
showers are caused by comets, which are loosely put together with lots
of debris in tow that fly into the atmosphere -- but not Geminid.
An asteroid large space rock named 3200 Phaethon flings the stardust that makes the sparkling magic.
Of all the named asteroids, it is the one that flies closest to the sun, Cooke said -- 2.5 times closer than the planet Mercury.
It's a bit of a mystery
why 3200 Phaeton is flying with so much debris, Cooke said. He thinks
perhaps it was produced by a collision eons ago with another asteroid.
Geminid contains the name of the constellation Gemini, which is the direction the meteors will be coming from.
They can be viewed well
starting at 11 p.m., but Cooke recommends waiting until an hour before
dawn, "if you can stand the cold." That will give the bright moon time
to set and allow the heavens to darken.
Don't use a telescope or
binoculars. He recommends lying flat on your back in a sleeping bag so
you can take in as much of the sky as possible.
He won't be joining you,
but will wait until morning to watch video recordings captured by
NASA's cameras -- for comfort's sake, he said.
"I'm too old to freeze my rear off anymore."
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