Hi to all. I haven't posted here before, and only joined the site about a week or two ago.
I saw this meteor. Fantastic sight. I was on the way to work, to tidy up a few hours of paperwork, and had only been in the car a few minutes, heading east towards Cobram. Thought it was a flare initially, but soon realised it wasn't.
The irony is, ive been observing meteors for 20 years, 1000's of hours of dedicated meteor observing, and by sheer luck, this is the brightest one i have ever seen! Using the moon later in the night as a guide, and the amount of skyglow it produced, i estimated it at magnitude -11, but its exceptionally hard to put a magnitude on a fireball sighting of this brightness.
Anyway, spectacular sight, and one of my astronomical highlights of the year. The important thing about this meteor/fireball is the high likelihood of a meteorite fall from it, due to its brightness. With the large number of observations of it, a trajectory can be calculated. The more observations, the more accurate the trajectory.
Could anyone who saw this object please send information to
adamrmarsh@netspace.net.au Details needed are: Start height (or nearest star), end height (or nearest star), length in degrees, estimated brightness, speed estimate (degrees per second) and importantly exact location. Of course, name, contact email and /or contact phone number would be great.
Information would be greatly appreciated. Who am i to send the information to? My name is Adam Marsh and I coordinate the EAMN (Eastern Australian Meteor Network). All data will be forwarded to the IMO (International Meteor Organisation) for assistance with calculating a trajectory of a possible meteorite fall.
Thanks heaps
Adam Marsh.
Coordinator EAMN (Eastern Australian Meteor Network)
Webmaster EAMN Homepage -
www.eamn.info