| Observer | |
|---|---|
| Name | Victoria L |
| Experience Level | 1/5 |
| Remarks | - |
| Location | |
|---|---|
| Address | , Scotland (GB) |
| Latitude | 55° 54' 34.91'' N (55.909697°) |
| Longitude | 3° 14' 9.56'' W (-3.23599°) |
| Elevation | 117m |
| Time and Duration | |
|---|---|
| Local Date & Time | 2019-02-02 22:57 GMT |
| UT Date & Time | 2019-02-02 22:57 UT |
| Duration | ≈3.5s |
| Direction | |
|---|---|
| Moving direction | From up left to down right |
| Descent Angle | 114° |
| Moving | |
|---|---|
| Facing azimuth | 236.4° |
| First azimuth | 191.02° |
| First elevation | 46° |
| Last azimuth | 288.45° |
| Last elevation | 19° |
| Brightness and color | |
|---|---|
| Stellar Magnitude | -24 |
| Color | Initially a small White ball and as it got closer it developed a yellow orangey fire tail |
| Concurrent Sound | |
|---|---|
| Observation | No |
| Remarks | - |
| Delayed Sound | |
|---|---|
| Observation | No |
| Remarks | - |
| Persistent train | |
|---|---|
| Observation | Yes |
| Duration | 2s |
| Length | 30° |
| Remarks | Began as a small white ball, it grew in size as it fell. After 2/3/ seconds the ball was much bigger (halfway thru' it's trajectory) and suddenly developed a fire trail attached to it, then the whole thing disappeared like a firework burning out. |
| Terminal flash | |
|---|---|
| Observation | Unknown |
| Remarks | - |
| Fragmentation | |
|---|---|
| Observation | Unknown |
| Remarks | - |