Hey Dean, List,

OK all... Before we get all excited over this. The photo IS in fact 100% a fireball, without a doubt it is a fireball fragmentation. It came from Mike Hankey and he has graciously let me post it on my meteorite blog.

There is an explanation of the photo below with links to enhanced images. It is not a plane, though I thought it was when I first looked at it, after careful examination and looking at the hi-res images it is a fireball/bolide event captured in the photo. There are too many streaks large and small for this to be a plane unless that plane is lit up like a Christmas tree.

In addition you will notice that toward the bottom of the image the streak get further apart, just as pieces of the fireball would have done during fragmentation...

Look at this hi-res image:
http://meteoriteblog.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/07/meteorjuly62009-watermarked-blog.jpg

And this one here which I enhanced to show the streaks a bit clearer:
http://meteoriteblog.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/07/Fireball-Photo-MH-closeup.jpg

And this one:
http://meteoriteblog.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/07/Fireball-Photo-Mike-Hankey-.jpg

Read the blog post here:
http://meteoriteblog.com/fireball-photos-meteor-streaks-through-sky-pa-fireball/

Enjoy...

Regards,
Eric

P.S. Sky & Telescope has asked Hankey to publish the image...




dean bessey wrote:
--- On Sat, 7/11/09, Mike Bandli <[email protected]> wrote:
I have captured numerous aircraft on long exposure and they all have strobes and 
appear as segmented lines. This one certainly does not, though it may be so close 
that it is not showing the break in strobes <snip>
I think the explanation for that is probably that usually you photograph small slow moving aircraft like a cessna while this is a much larger aircraft (Due to all of the light streaks - a small cessna wouldent have as many lights) and was probably moving faster and further away (Although not 30,000 feet as there were landing lights on).
Anybody also notice that in the photo the "Meteor" is going up toward space 
rather than falling like you would expect a meteor to do?
Cheers
DEAN


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--
Regards,
Eric Wichman
Meteorites USA
http://www.meteoritesusa.com
904-236-5394

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