Fireball Over Wales 51
nagora writes "After last weeks meteor strike on an Indian village, Astronomy Picture of the Day has a spectacular photo of a fireball over Wales. Come home to a real fire..."
Reality must take precedence over public relations, for Mother Nature cannot be fooled. -- R.P. Feynman
Fireball (Score:1, Funny)
Re:Fireball (Score:3, Funny)
You seem to forget the birth of Katherine Zeta-Jones. Mmmmmmm......
Green fireball (Score:5, Interesting)
Unfortunately I haven't found any references to it anywhere. I'm pretty sure others must have seen it too.
This Wales fireball seems even more impressive though.
Re:Green fireball (Score:2, Insightful)
If you ever see another one, contact local astronomers to report it, they get off on that sort of thing, and want people to report fireball sightings.
Re:Green fireball (Score:1)
Your remark made me think again on how the internet and the ubiquitousness of cameras have changed everything. While I wanted to report it back then I didn't get to doing it due to lack of contact info. This would be a no-brainer now.
Re:Green fireball (Score:2)
Re:Green fireball (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Green fireball (Score:3, Interesting)
I was looking for mars but found it on the opposite side of the sky from where it really was. This object didn't move, but grew very bright, brighter than the real mars a month ago. It grew extremely bright over the period of about 30 seconds. Maybe 5x the brightness and size of Mars's best showing this year. Then it quickly faded to nothing. Only thing I can think of is a meteor that was coming directly at me, as it didn
Re:Green fireball (Score:2)
-Sean
Re:Green fireball (Score:2)
Re:Green fireball (Score:2)
That's it! Looked just like the pics I found.
Thanks!
Re:Green fireball (Score:1)
I saw something similar about two weeks ago, a little way north of Baltimore. My best guess is that is was one of the Iridium satellites - when the light catches them just right, they shine very brightly for a short time.
Remeber Kids (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Remeber Kids (Score:2, Funny)
Don't do high energy physics experiments in your mothers microwave without taking the appropriate safety precautions.
Two men are surprised to meet in mid-air, one plummeting downward toward the ground while the other soars higher upward. As they pass, the first yells out "Do you know anything about parachuting?" The second shouts back, "No! Do you know anything about gas barbecues?"
Bolides (Score:1, Interesting)
Infidels! (Score:2)
Unless you discover heaven, of course.
(if you don't know what I'm talking about, read/see The Discovery of Heaven [dannyreviews.com] by Dutch wannabe Novel prize winner Harry Mulisch.
Come home to a real fire... (Score:3, Informative)
For those who don't remeber / know 'Not the Nine O'Clock News' [wikipedia.org] it's where Rowan Atkinson (Mr Bean, Blackadder) got his break on TV.
Don.
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Don't say revenge. Don't say revenge. Ummm.. revenge? Okay, that's it. I'm outta here. *step step step step step..door slam*
...Buy a cottage in Wales (Score:4, Funny)
"Come home to a real fire" in the context of Wales made me laugh though. Back in the 1980s it was the slogan used to advertise coal fires, and at the time the extreme fringe of the Welsh Nationalists were burning down holiday cotages in North Wales owned by absentees.
I cant remember who it was, might have been "Not the 9 o'clock news", ran a spoof of the coal fire ads, "Come home to a real fire, buy a cottage in Wales"
Re:...Buy a cottage in Wales (Score:2)
Re:...Buy a cottage in Wales (Score:2)
Re:...Buy a cottage in Wales (Score:2)
Re:...Buy a cottage in Wales (Score:2)
It sure was [wikipedia.org]
'Come Home to a Real Fire (Buy a Cottage in Wales)' (a reference to a spate of arson attacks by Welsh people against English settlers, and also a parody of the contemporary coal marketing campaign)
You young folks might not know (Score:4, Funny)
And I, for one, welcome our new... (Score:2)
Picture reminds me of a fireball I saw... (Score:2)
while driving back to college (UC Irvine) on a sunday night. It seemed to be streaking straight down to my south, and I kept hoping that the university had been destroyed to get me out of my compiler construction course!
During the 2001 Leonids, (Score:4, Interesting)
Thats no fireball..... (Score:1)
Is it Clark Kent? (Score:2)
Re:Is it Clark Kent? (Score:2)
I always wondered what happened when ..... (Score:2, Funny)
RTFA (Score:2)
Come on SlashDot...let's not turn into the National Enquirer in our search for articles OK?
Re:RTFA (Score:1)
"Editor's note: The APOD text has been modified from its original content. "
This morning the part about the contrail was ommitted.
Re:RTFA (Score:2)
I see no clear-cut photographic evidence to rule this out as a bolide.
Lesson learned (Score:3)
Earlier this weekend... (Score:2)
Not a fireball (Score:1)
As the Nerimoff suggests this is just a reflection of light from the Sun as it disappears over the horizon. It seems quite striking when you see it because of the contrast with darker clouds around. I guess the angle the light is striking at and the type of cloud or contrail would combine to give the effect.
Re:Not a fireball (Score:2)
Re:Not a fireball *IT'S A CLOUD!* (Score:2)
Clouds reflect sun light, and sometimes they look funny.
that fireball is much brighter than the light reflected off a cloud could be.
Look at the follow up picture, it's a cloud, reflecting the setting sun. This is the follow up picture, taken a minute after the first:
http://antwrp.gsfc.nasa.gov/apod/image/0310/fireb a ll2_burnett_big.jpg [nasa.gov]
If you think that's a 'fireball in the sky' then your in need of psychiatric attention.
Units? (Score:2)
Re:Units? (Score:1)
Re:Units? (Score:2)
Begun in the summer of 1783 and completed by the autumn of 1784. First published in 1785. Asked by Cowper to suggest a subject for a poem, his friend Lady Austen submitted that he take a lighter subject than had been his custom, and facetiously set him the "task" of composing one about a sofa. His earlier poetry had, for the most part, been written in
Fireball over whales?! (Score:2)
Actually, a lot of stuff has been falling recently (Score:2)
Link-O-Rama. .
About 4 or 5 years ago there was a bit of noise around the scientific community about a mysterious very big object being detected around the vicinity of Pluto's orbit. An object travelling on an eliptical orbit
Indiana, too (Score:2)
The funny thing is that that very night I was out in the woods with a friend, and saw a big fireball coming down. I pointed, and my friend managed to see it even after I pointed. He turned fast, and managed to see it. Most times, by the time you point, it's already gone. It was about 1AM EST in Richmond at the time. Anyone else see it?
I saw one _just_now_ outside, in DC (Score:3, Funny)
I did not make out a tale due to the sheer brightness of the fireball but after some time I was able to determine that it is slowly headed west, having approached DC from the Atlantic, presumably. A co-worker claims she saw it just crawling over the horizon this morning at about 7am. It is far, far brighter than the full moon, I can tell you with certainty.
What is going on with all these fireballs?
blakespot