The Denver Post

LIGHTS ABOVE SEATTLE, PORTLAND WEREN’T METEORS

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The mysterious bright lights streaking across the Pacific Northwest’s night sky Thursday were not planes or meteors, but debris from a SpaceX rocket.

That is what the experts said, at least. But not everyone got the memo, so there was plenty of confusion.

“We have been getting a number of calls about this!” the Portland, Ore., office of the National Weather Service said on Twitter.

It added moments later — with the caveat that it was no expert in rocket science — that the “widely reported bright objects in the sky” appeared to be debris from a SpaceX rocket that “did not successful­ly have a deorbit burn.”

A “deorbit burn” is the technical term for when a spaceship rotates tail-first and fires its rockets before reentering the Earth’s atmosphere.

Jonathan McDowell, an astronomer with the Center for Astrophysi­cs at Harvard University, wrote on Twitter that what people saw in the Pacific Northwest on Thursday night was part of a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket that had launched in early March. The debris was reentering the atmosphere after 22 days in orbit, he said. Falcon 9 rockets have been carrying cargo and satellites into space for years.

McDowell wrote that the “space junk” visible over Seattle was the result of a breakup that happened about 30 miles above where airplanes fly. The Falcon 9 debris falling to Earth was “unlikely to be major,” he added, and would most likely fall in the Rocky Mountains near the Canadian border.

In the Seattle and Portland areas, the spectacle Thursday night seemed to inspire more delight and bewilderme­nt than fear.

One user grumbled that she had somehow missed it. Another marveled at how astronomer­s on the internet had managed to solve the mystery so quickly, even as a ship remained stuck in the Suez Canal for days.

The SpaceX Twitter feed had not weighed in on the Pacific Northwest’s mystery light show as of Friday.

But National Weather Service staffers stayed up late tweeting their astronomic­al impression­s — and they seemed to be having fun.

“A bit anticlimac­tic, given the events of the evening, but the Orion Nebula looks beautiful tonight from our roof,” the agency’s Seattle office wrote, referring to a constellat­ion. “Yet another satellite managed to photobomb the shot.”

 ?? Roman Puzhlyakov, The Associated Press ?? Debris from a SpaceX rocket lights up the sky over Vancouver, Wash., on Thursday evening.
Roman Puzhlyakov, The Associated Press Debris from a SpaceX rocket lights up the sky over Vancouver, Wash., on Thursday evening.

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