Fireball tally from American Meteor Society

Asteroid 2018 GE3 flew past Earth at 0.5 LD
A newly discovered asteroid designated 2018 GE3 flew past Earth at a very close distance of 0.5 LD or 0.00129 AU (~192 981 km / 119 912 miles) on April 15, 2018. This is the 28th known asteroid to flyby Earth within 1 lunar distance since the start of the year and the second largest.

This object belongs to the Apollo group of asteroids. It was first observed at Catalina Sky Survey on April 14, just hours before its closest approach.

Asteroid 2018 GE3 has an estimated diameter between 48 and 110 m (157 and 360 feet) and it flew past February 15, 2013 Earth at a speed (relative to the Earth) of 29.58 km/s.

This is the 3rd known asteroid to flyby Earth within 1 lunar distance this month and the 28th since January 1. It is also the second largest known object to flyby Earth within 1 LD since the start of the year.

For comparison, an asteroid that exploded some 29.7 km (18.5 miles) above the Russian city of Chelyabinsk on damaging over 3 000 buildings and injuring over 1 500 people (mostly by broken window glass), had an estimated size of approximately 20 m (65 feet). Its light was brighter than the Sun, visible up to 100 km (62 miles) away.

Chelyabinsk asteroid, officially named Chelyabinsk meteorite, was undetected before its atmospheric entry, in part because its radiant was close to the Sun.

In the hours following the visual meteor sighting, a 6-meter (20 feet) wide hole was discovered on Lake Chebarkul's frozen surface and scientists from the Ural Federal University collected 53 samples from around the hole the same day it was discovered.
Reference:
Asteroid 2018 GE3 at Minor Planet Center; at CNEOS

Featured Image:The green line indicates the object's apparent motion relative to the Earth, and the bright green marks are the object's location at approximately one-hour intervals. The Moon's orbit is grey. The blue arrow points in the direction of Earth's motion and the yellow arrow points toward the Sun. Credit: Minor Planet Center.

Asteroid 2018 GE3 - Close approach April 15, 2018 - Orbital diagram 2 - Create, Discover and Share GIFs on Gfycat
 
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Fireball captured blazing across the night sky in China - Sonic boom reported, possibility of meteorites -- Sott.net
Fri, 01 Jun 2018 08:10 UTC YouTube
Snip: Video
Exoss Citizen Science YouTube channel reports of a fireball sighting in China:

A HUGE fireball (meteor) appeared over Jinghong city, China yesterday, June 1 (13:40 UT)! Sonic booms were reported, indicating the fireball likely penetrated lower than 30 km and quite possibly dropped meteorites!
Video: Xiao Jia Gong Gong via @Exos Citizen Science

Other local news outlets report the phenomenon was seen from Simao, that it was very bright, lasted about 2 seconds and was accompanied by two loud noises - presumably sonic booms. One Mr. Zhou from Dongfeng, Jinghong, heard the noise from inside his home.
In the video posted below the photographer can be heard exclaiming "What is this?!"

Photos
Date 2018-05-30 00:45:00 CEST Credit M. O'Neill
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This photo is related to AMS #1904-2018
Location Tjentište BA
Geo Loc 43.3461° / 18.6864°
Elevation 629.0782m


This photo is related to AMS #1900-2018

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-23.7929 -45.4018

Date 2018-05-28 02:04:00 PDT Location Lafayette US
Videos
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This video has been uploaded on the American Meteor Society Website. AMS Event: 1901-2018, Report 142305 (1901a-2018

Meteor Activity Outlook for June 2-8, 2018
Robert Lunsford AMS

Bright fireballs, meteors around the world in recent years
Published on May 28, 2018 / 1:22 (Dated)
 
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Fireball event in the Netherlands on Saturday June 16, 2018 around 21:09 UT was widely seen and reported.
IMO-report; AMS-report.

News report (Dutch only):
Tientallen meldingen over vuurbal in de lucht, ook boven Pinkpop

Translation:
Dozens of reports about fireball in the air, also above Pinkpop festival

Today, 14:24 Restated at 14:42

It only took a few seconds, but for dozens of people it was just long enough to see it. Last night a fireball was shearing through heaven and that did not go unnoticed.

The International Meteor Organization website received 90 reports from all over the country, but the phenomenon was also reported to have been seen in various places in Belgium, France and Germany. A visitor to Pinkpop saw the flash in the corners of his eye and recorded it on video (20 seconds) during a performance by American rock band Foo Fighters.

The video on Dumpert has already been watched tens of thousands of times. This festival visitor was one of the few to succeed in filming the meteorite. Not even experts have succeeded. "Our camera system was not yet operational, because it was still twilight," says meteorite researcher Marco Langbroek.

At various locations in the country there are cameras with a longer exposure time to capture meteorites in the dark. "In this way, we can determine which route it has taken," says Langbroek. "But if that thing comes during the day or at dusk, then it will be difficult.

That's why Pinkpop's film is very valuable, says the researcher. "That's fine, because it allowed me to establish that it wasn't a rocket launcher or an old satellite component. It was a real meteor, a piece of comet or something like that.
I could hardly believe it'.

The German Uwe Reichert succeeded in photographing the fireball. "It looked like a rocket, but it was much faster and pierced the clouds," he writes on Twitter. "At the time, I could hardly believe it myself. You don't plan to take a picture like that. The chances of success are probably even smaller than winning a lottery.


It happens a few times a year that a piece of space debris comes into the atmosphere and burns. "There's something to see every month, although it was brighter than usual," says Langbroek.

Last year

Usually it is a beautiful spectacle, but the researchers still keep a close eye on these kinds of phenomena. "If it's a relatively slow fireball and it stays low, there may be some leftovers and it may reach the earth's surface.

This happened, for example, last year (video, 49 seconds) in Broek in Waterland. A meteorite (news article in Dutch) descended by ten kilometres per second and ended up in a shed. The rock was ten centimetres in size and half a kilo heavy.

Translated with www.DeepL.com/Translator
 
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A huge meteorite just splashed into the ocean, and scientists want to find it
7.1.18 - 10:52AM
Residents of Ocean Shores, Washington, were startled on the evening of March 7 when a bright flash lit up the sky and a tremendous boom rattled the sleepy seaside town. “They thought it was a spaceship,” local resident Brittany Bryson told the Seattle Times.

It wasn’t a spaceship, but it was definitely a visitor from outer space. From analysis of radar signals, Marc Fries, NASA Cosmic Dust Curator, concluded it was a meteorite about the size of a golf cart that broke apart and splashed down into the ocean about 16 miles off the coast. Approximately two tons of fragments are likely scattered over a half-mile of seafloor.

“This is easily the biggest recorded meteor fall in the United States in 21 years,” Fries said.

Some of the debris that survived the plunge may be as large as a brick, and scientists want to retrieve as much as they can for further study. Luckily, a nearby research ship is in the middle of a survey mission, and they have some high-tech tools to aid in the scavenger hunt.

The Nautilus is the flagship of the Ocean Exploration Trust (OET), a nonprofit group founded by explorer Robert Ballard. Joined by scientists from the University of Washington, the Olympic Coast National Marine Sanctuary, and NASA, the Nautilus will use remote-operated submarines to survey the area and collect any fragments they find.


The debris field is situated near an underwater canyon about 400 feet deep. The area is relatively flat, making the dark-black meteorites easier to spot resting on the lighter seafloor. The OET, which previously discovered the wreckage of the Titanic, agreed to donate a day of their technical expertise to the endeavor. “It’s a great opportunity for us because it’s such an interesting, pure exploration type mission,” said Nicole Raineault, vice president of exploration and science.

Any meteorites discovered will be added to the research collection at the Smithsonian Institution in Washington, D.C.

The Nautilus also includes a high-speed satellite connection which is used to transmit video and other sensor data in real time to their mission control center at the University of Rhode Island. A live stream video of the expedition will be available at www.nautiluslive.org if you want to follow the search. The remote submarine dive is scheduled to occur between 9 am and 4 pm (Pacific Time) on July 2.

EVNautilus Published on Jul 2, 2018
As Nautilus is starting to hunt for a massive meteorite fall off the Washington coast, we asked the team aboard: do you think we'll actually find any.

Meteors Published on Jul 2, 2018
This meteor event was recorded over the south of Spain on 2 July 2018 at 3:58 local time (1:58 universal time). The event was produced by a tough rock from a comet that hit the atmosphere at about 118000 km/h. The fireball began at an altitude of around 99 km over the province of Malaga, and ended at a height of about 31 km over the province of Cordoba. The fireball was recorded by the meteor observing stations operating in the framework of the SMART Project from the astronomical observatories of Calar Alto, La Sagra (Granada), La Hita (Toledo), Sierra Nevada (Granada), Huelva and Sevilla.


Location Lakeland US
AMS American Meteor Society Published on Jul 1, 2018
This video has been uploaded on the American Meteor Society Website. AMS Event: 2244-2018, Report 143965 (2244a-2018) Credit:J. Gresham

Washington and Oregon: MYSTERIOUS FLASH, AND REPORTED BOOM CAUGHT ON VIDEO(RAW FOOTAGE)

UFO explodes above San Jose, CA USA March 26 2018

More Footage Of The Meteor Over Russian Urals. March 6, 2018
 
Traces of 'Sonic Boom' Meteorites Found on Ocean Floor
July 5, 2018 11:21am ET

The first mission designed to hunt a meteorite that crashed into the ocean has now discovered what may be tiny fragments of the meteorite's crust, researchers say.

On March 7, three National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) weather stations detected the fall of a meteorite about 15.5 miles (25 kilometers) off the coast of Washington state. "The fall was widely seen around local areas and widely heard around local areas — it came with some loud sonic booms," Marc Fries, the cosmic dust curator for NASA, told Live Science.

Fries estimated this fall might yield about 4,400 lbs. (2,000 kilograms) of meteorites. He also calculated the largest meteorite might weigh about 9.7 lbs. (4.4 kg) and have a diameter of about 5 inches (12 centimeters). [Crash! The 10 Biggest Impact Craters on Earth]

"This is the largest meteorite fall I've seen in 20-plus years of radar data," Fries said.

The details the scientists had regarding the fall suggested the meteorite was unusually strong, Fries said. This knowledge, in combination with the fact the meteorite landed on a soft seafloor as opposed to dry land, suggested this ocean fall might yield large, relatively intact meteorites for scientists to study.


Until now, scientists had never intentionally recovered a meteorite from the ocean, Fries said. In the past, researchers had accidentally discovered a couple of meteorites from drilling samples taken from the seafloor, he noted. However, this latest endeavor is the "first intentional search for meteorites from the ocean," Fries said.

Ocean Exploration Trust, a scientific research nonprofit organization, worked with scientists from NOAA's Olympic Coast National Marine Sanctuary, NASA and the University of Washington to locate any meteorites from this fall.

On July 1, the Exploration Vessel Nautilus investigated about 0.4 square mile (1 square kilometer) of water in the Olympic Coast National Marine Sanctuary, located off the coast of Washington state, sailing about 330 feet (100 meters) above the seafloor. The ship used multibeam sonar to map the seafloor, but the team "didn't really see any smoking-gun signature of a meteorite, any change to the texture of the seafloor," Nicole Raineault, leader of the expedition and the vice president of exploration and science operations at the Ocean Exploration Trust, told Live Science.

On July 2, the scientists deployed two remote-controlled submarines — the Hercules and the Argus — to investigate the seafloor. If the researchers saw anything interesting through the cameras of these remotely operated vehicles, they directed the robots to pick them up using either magnets or a suction pump.

The researchers did not spot any meteorites, as the seafloor was very soft, "and in all likelihood, any meteorites sank into the seafloor," Fries said.

However, after returning to the lab and spending 6 hours analyzing sediment, the team identified what seemed to be meteorite fragments in the last sample they had gathered, Fries said. "So far, we see two small fragments," he said.

"The meteorite fragments are small, melted pieces of rock," Fries said. Each about 2 to 3 millimeters [0.08 to 0.12 inches] large, they likely came "from the outside of a meteorite. When a meteor enters the atmosphere, it accrues what's called a fusion crust — "you have flash-melting of the rock, which coats the rock like pottery glaze," he said.

The reason Fries thinks these fragments are from the recent meteorite fall is that they are "basically made of glass, and such flash-melted glassy materialsdo not tend to last long in seawater." Moreover, these fragments "looked like they came from a small pit in the seafloor," Fries said. "It's some evidence that they came from something that fell."

Now, Fries and his colleagues will analyze these fragments in the lab to see what they are made of. "If they are meteoric in origin, we can tell what kind of meteorite they came from," he said.

Additional smaller meteorite fragments may lurk in sediment that the researchers collected. "We regularly deal with specks naked to the eye," Fries said. "We can deal with smaller things."

There are no plans to return to the site tolook for more meteorite fragments, but, Fries said, "I certainly wouldn't mind going."

 
American Meteor Society Website. AMS Event: 2307-2018, Report 144435 (2307ew-2018) Jul 8, 2018
Videos
Location Albany US
Geo Loc 40.2485° / -94.3198°
Elevation 277.3210m

Meteorite fall on July 9 // Caída de meteorito del 9 de julio
Meteors Published on Jul 9, 2018
This meteor event was recorded over Andalusia and the Mediterranean Sea on 9 July 2018 at 5:13 local time (3:13 universal time). The event was produced by a fragment from an asteroid that hit the atmosphere at about 65000 km/h. The fireball began at an altitude of around 89 km over the province of Almería, and ended at a height of about 31 km over the Sea. The analysis of its atmospheric path shows that this was a potential meteorite-producing event. The meteorite would have fallen into the sea, with a mass of just a few grams. The event was recorded by the meteor observing stations operated by the SMART Project (University of Huelva) from the astronomical observatories of Calar Alto, La Sagra, La Hita and Sevilla Jose Maria Madiedo (@jmmadiedo) | Twitter

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In this diagram of the inner solar system, all of the fireball orbits intersect at a single point--Earth. The orbits are color-coded by velocity, from slow (red) to fast (blue). [Larger image] [movies]
SpaceWeather.com -- News and information about meteor showers, solar flares, auroras, and near-Earth asteroids

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Meteors
Published on Jul 19, 2018
This meteor event was recorded over Andalusia on 19 July 2018 at 5:28 local time (3:28 universal time). The event was produced by a fragment from a comet that hit the atmosphere at about 80000 km/h.

The fireball began at an altitude of around 95 km over the province of Granada, and ended at a height of about 43 km over the province of Almería. The fireball was recorded by the meteor observing stations operating in the framework of the SMART Project from the astronomical observatories of Calar Alto (Almería), La Sagra (Granada), La Hita (Toledo), Huelva and Sevilla.

AMS
Fireball Reports in Spain (ES)
Jun 19, 2018 - Jul 20, 2018
Reports found: 6 in the last 30 days


 
Me thinks that perhaps were seeing remnants of the current debris of The Alpha Capricornids according to AMS

Translated from Spanish by Microsoft
There are two new impacts on the moon. The MIDAS project telescopes have recorded these collisions@ UniHuelva @ElHuffPost @LeoAstronomada @iaaucc @aberron @elsegundoluz @esa_es @elmundociencia @CPlanetarias @agomezroldan @miangulo_95 @PlanetarioMad


July 19, 2018 AMS American Meteor Society
Published on Jul 19, 2018
This video has been uploaded on the American Meteor Society Website. AMS Event: 2472-2018, Report 145466 (2472a-2018) Credit:J. Gresham
 
A fireball was detected over Greenland on July 25, 2018 by US Government sensors at an altitude of 43.3 km. The energy from the explosion is estimated to be 2.1 kilotons.

03.08.2018 - Meteor Reportedly Explodes Over US Air Base, Military Keeps Silent :wow:
Meteor Reportedly Explodes Over US Air Base, Military Keeps Silence

NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory and the director of the Nuclear Information Project for the Federation of American Scientists have reported on the meteor, which produced an explosion with 2.1 kilotons of force. Units stationed at the missile-warning base, however, shared no information about this on their website.

Director of the Nuclear Information Project for the Federation of American Scientists Hans Kristensen has shared information about a meteor that burst just dozens of kilometers above the US Thule Air Base in Greenland that is designed to warn of potential missile attacks.


Hans Kristensen @nukestrat

Meteor explodes with 2.1 kilotons force 43 km above missile early warning radar at Thule Air Base. https://twitter.com/RonBaalke/status/1024371681106620416 …
HT @Casillic

We’re still here, so they correctly concluded it was not a Russian first strike. There are nearly 2,000 nukes on alert, ready to launch.
Rocket Ron @RonBaalke

A fireball was detected over Greenland on July 25, 2018 by US Government sensors at an altitude of 43.3 km. The energy from the explosion is estimated to be 2.1 kilotons.


The original message about the explosion that Kristensen re-tweeted was posted by a user who described himself as a "space explorer at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory."

However, according to Business Insider, neither the 12th Space Warning Squadron based at Thule, the 21st Space Wing, nor the Wing's 821st Air Base Group from the missile warning Thule Air Base, which is intended to provide space surveillance and satellite command, reported publicly on the incident. >>>>>>> :scooter: :oops: Wrong EXIT! >>>>>>> :rotfl: >>>>>>>>
 
Some Russian netizens on Saturday captured the fascinating sight of a fleet of meteors entering the atmosphere in the Russian city of Khanty-Mansiysk.

05.08.2018 - Watch: Armada of Meteors Strikes Sunset Sky in Eastern Russia
WATCH: Armada of Meteors Strikes Sunset Sky in Eastern Russia

The intriguing footage was claimed to have been made by drivers on the Nefteugansk-Surgut highway in far eastern Russia. The video depicts a small group of UFO-like lights entering the sunset sky above Russia, while eyewitnesses express amusement and guess whether they have just spotted some natural process or a "real alien invasion."

https://youtu.be/LOZEmu7w-w0
 
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