There is an all-sky camera at Apache Point Observatory, but it appears to have been turned off until later that night. Observatories use them so that remote observers can monitor the weather.

I dug around on the web to see if there is a camera on top of Mount Baldy, perhaps at Magdalene Ridge Observatory, but with no luck. A camera there would be ideally located. At the very least we might be able to tell that it happened over the White Sands Missile Range or not.

Greg

On 4/14/2014 3:50 PM, Bill Cooke wrote:
The information

I found some info on the fall and here is some stats...

vel 667.2 km/s beg 135.8 km end 40.8 km

is from our Fireballs website and is an automatic, obviously incorrect solution to the 
event. There are 2 NASA cameras in southern New Mexico - one, at NMSU, collected decent 
data on the event, whereas the other one, located in Mayhill, saw only bright flashes 
through clouds, very similar to lightning. The automated software did the best it could 
to calculate a trajectory, but lightning events are often confused with fireballs, and it 
simply "went home to momma". On the plus side, we have been able to filter out 
most of the planes :/

If you use the Fireballs website, please look at the videos. If one or more 
shows lightning, then you know the trajectory is crap. In general, any meteor 
solution with a speed higher than 72-73 km/s should be regarded with much 
skepticism.

Most all sky meteor cameras are similar to the Sandia design and use relatively 
low resolution low light level cameras like the Watec 902H2. As a result, 
meteor trajectory precision is about 100 meters in normal cases, which 
translates to an uncertainty in speed of 5-10%. As mentioned by others, this 
affects the semimajor axis and eccenticity (size and shape of orbit) the most, 
with the orbital angles (inclination, argument of perihelion, and ascending 
node) being much better determined, usually to the 1% level. These are low 
precision orbits, good for statistical work, but individual examples should be 
used with care.

Regards,
Bill Cooke

--
Greg Crinklaw
Astronomical Software Developer
Cloudcroft, New Mexico
skyhound.com
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