Near-Earth objects and close calls

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So they really need the war to disguise celestial intentions, eh?
A friend of mine who is a stargazer captured the meteor and noticed that the colour was more Orange/Pink rather than the usual Green/Blue.

He sent the pictures to NASA asking the question and they got back to him saying that it could have come from the Oort Cloud.
 

Long-duration fireball streaks across western Turkey skies, possibly an Earth-grazing meteor​

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A bright fireball was observed over western Turkey on the evening of March 15, with residents across Uşak Province reporting a slow-moving luminous object crossing the night sky for more than 20 seconds.

Videos recorded by witnesses show a bright white to bluish-green object with a compact head and a narrow glowing tail moving across the sky at a shallow angle before fading from view. The long visible duration and smooth motion distinguish the event from typical meteors, which usually last only a few seconds.

Preliminary analysis suggests the object may have been an Earth-grazing meteor, a rare type of fireball that skims the upper atmosphere at very shallow angles.

Earth-grazing meteors enter the atmosphere at a shallow trajectory and travel hundreds of kilometers through the upper atmosphere before exiting again into space or continuing along a long atmospheric path. Because they remain at high altitude, they can remain visible for 10 to 40 seconds, significantly longer than most meteors.



Still images from the available videos show a single luminous body with a smooth, tapering plasma trail and no visible fragmentation. The emission color appears white to bluish-green, which is commonly produced when meteoroids vaporize and excite atmospheric gases at hypersonic speeds.

If the object traveled at typical meteoroid velocities of around 20 km/s (12.4 miles/s) and remained visible for about 20 seconds, it could have crossed approximately 400 km (250 miles) of sky. Events of this type can be visible over large areas and may have been seen from other parts of western Turkey or over the Aegean region.

Earth-grazing fireballs are rare but well documented. In such events, the meteoroid can skim the atmosphere at altitudes around 80 to 100 km (50 to 62 miles), and in some cases, the object survives the passage and returns to space on a modified orbit around the Sun.

There are currently no reports of damage, sonic booms, or meteorite falls associated with the event.

At the time of writing, the fireball had not yet appeared in reconstructed trajectory datasets from global meteor observation networks.

Further reports from other locations could help determine the fireball’s trajectory and confirm whether the object followed a grazing path through the upper atmosphere.

If you’ve witnessed the event, we invite you to submit a report to the International Meteor Organization.


 
How weird...
that thing (the proclaimed long-duration fireball) doesn't appear to move in any way...

More AI drama fun ?
They've been described and filmed before though, before AI was widespread or available. This one was presumably at 20 km/s.

And even slower ones have been described:

When one studies the NASA Bolide data, the slowest of those that are calculated is just below 10 km/s (9.8 km/s), thus significantly higher than 7 km/s.

Spaceweather reports 17 fireballs for today (March 17th 2026) over the U.S. Busier than usual.
 
Hera, a planetary defense investment mission launched on October 7th, 2024. Symbolical anniversary for the war on Gaza or not, the coincidence doesn't go unremarked.

Hera on course for asteroid rendezvous

A successful deep-space manoeuvre has put ESA’s Hera spacecraft on course for its rendezvous with the Didymos binary asteroid system later this year.

The European Space Agency’s (ESA) Hera spacecraft is on its way to the only asteroids in existence whose orbits have been deliberately altered by human action.

At the Didymos binary system, Hera will help scientists answer the questions remaining after NASA’s DART spacecraft impacted Didymos’ smaller moon Dimorphos. In doing so, Hera will help to transform asteroid deflection by kinetic impact into a well-understood and repeatable technique for protecting Earth.

Hera recently completed the second of two deep-space manoeuvres on its journey from Earth to Didymos. The manoeuvre burned 123 kg of onboard hydrazine fuel and changed the spacecraft’s velocity by 367 m/s – a change comparable to an object accelerating from stationary to supersonic flight.
Tracking data from ESA’s Estrack network of deep space antennas confirmed the success of the manoeuvre, and downlinked telemetry from the spacecraft shows that all subsystems performed as expected.

With the deep-space manoeuvre complete, the Hera team has its sights set on arrival at Didymos. Extensive onboard software updates have been designed to prepare the spacecraft for close-proximity operations at the asteroids.

The update adds and improves functionalities that Hera will need to carry out humankind’s first thorough survey of a binary asteroid, such as new software for Hera’s laser altimeter – which will continuously monitor its distance from the asteroids – and for the monitoring camera that will visually monitor and confirm the release of Hera’s two CubeSats.
Sounds like something that could be hacked.
Unlike larger deep-space destinations such as planets, Didymos and Dimorphos are small, dark and hard to see: Hera will need to actively search for the asteroids and keep them centred in its field of view as it navigates towards them.

The approach will last around three weeks and will test Hera’s guidance, navigation and control systems to the fullest.
Dark and hard to see, and these are in the "backyard".

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Hera’s deep space manoeuvre in February/March 2026 aligned the inclination of the spacecraft’s orbit around the Sun with that of the Didymos binary asteroid system.

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