Observer | |
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Name | Graeme D |
Experience Level | 2/5 |
Remarks | If there were any fragments, they weren't large enough to escape the tail or deviate course - but portions of the tail DID burn longer than others, and might be recognized as fragments by someone more experienced than me. Also, from my perspective, it seemed to move more slowly than the meteors I have seen during meteor showers, if that matters at all, and if I had been holding a ruler at arms length, the tip of the object itself would have measured between 1/16 and 1/8 of an inch. |
Location | |
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Address | Bellevue, WA |
Latitude | 47° 36' 54.28'' N (47.615078°) |
Longitude | 122° 10' 44.9'' W (-122.179139°) |
Elevation | 53.082527m |
Time and Duration | |
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Local Date & Time | 2013-09-08 23:01 PDT |
UT Date & Time | 2013-09-09 06:01 UT |
Duration | ≈1.5s |
Direction | |
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Moving direction | From up left to down right |
Descent Angle | 135° |
Moving | |
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Facing azimuth | 182.46° |
First azimuth | 184.46° |
First elevation | 36° |
Last azimuth | 197.9° |
Last elevation | 20° |
Brightness and color | |
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Stellar Magnitude | -18 |
Color | Green |
Concurrent Sound | |
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Observation | No |
Remarks | - |
Delayed Sound | |
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Observation | No |
Remarks | - |
Persistent train | |
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Observation | Yes |
Duration | 2s |
Length | 9° |
Remarks | Green, shifted to orange, then red as it burned away. |
Terminal flash | |
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Observation | Unknown |
Remarks | - |
Fragmentation | |
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Observation | No |
Remarks | - |