The Star Malaysia

Stunning meteor lights up California sky

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SAN FRANCISCO: A streaking fireball lit up California skies and stunned stargazers, and profession­al observers say more meteors are on the way.

The exploding streak was visible over the San Francisco Bay area and other parts of Northern California, and there were also reports of a loud boom.

“It looked like a plane crash or rocket,” said Philip Terzian, an amateur astronomer who happened to photograph the meteor while atop a ridge around Palo Alto.

Terzian had gathered there with a group of other astronomy enthusiast­s. The group had not met in some time and just happened to be there for the meteor. “It was a ‘Holy Cow!’ moment,” he said. Other observers described the streak as crescent shaped, and reddish orange in colour.

The sound people reported could have been a sonic boom from the meteor travelling faster than the speed of sound, said Jonathan Braidman, an astronomy instructor with the Chabot Space & Science Centre in Oakland. “It’s like a jet fighter,” he said. Braidman said the meteor was likely metal and rock from the asteroid belt. Astronomer­s at the centre estimated its size as that of a car although Braidman said it probably broke into much smaller pieces before hitting the ground and then scattered over hundreds of miles.

Wednesday’s light streak comes as astronomer­s expect a more dramatic light display this weekend that is part of the large, fast Orionid meteor shower, so-named because it has the Orion constellat­ion as a backdrop.

The Orion meteors are space debris from Halley’s Comet, and they become visible as the earth crosses through their trail, according to the Sacramento Bee.

Braidman said he does not think Wednesday’s meteor and this weekend’s Orionid shower are connected.

The shower’s peak is supposed to be tonight and on Sunday morning.

Wednesday’s meteor sighting was at least the second in Northern California in recent months. A meteor that exploded April 22 was seen over a large part of the region and Nevada.

That explosion prompted a group of scientists to go up in a slow-moving airship and look for meteorites. — AP

 ?? — AP ?? Sky light: A shooting star is seen above the Montebello Open Space Preserve in Palo Alto, California.
— AP Sky light: A shooting star is seen above the Montebello Open Space Preserve in Palo Alto, California.

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