Observer |
Name |
Rob C |
Experience Level |
1/5
|
Remarks |
Not only was it much brighter than a typical "shooting star", but it appeared much larger/closer than most. |
Location |
Address |
Seattle, WA |
Latitude |
47° 41' 34.01'' N (47.692781°)
|
Longitude |
122° 24' 18.83'' W (-122.405231°)
|
Elevation |
3.835m |
Time and Duration |
Local Date & Time |
2017-07-29 22:00 PDT
|
UT Date & Time |
2017-07-30 05:00 UT
|
Duration |
≈3.5s
|
Direction |
Moving direction |
From up right to down left |
Descent Angle |
269° |
Moving |
Facing azimuth |
62.67° |
First azimuth |
61.09° |
First elevation |
61° |
Last azimuth |
349.21° |
Last elevation |
58° |
Brightness and color |
Stellar Magnitude |
-19 |
Color |
Blue, Light Yellow, Red, White |
Concurrent Sound |
Observation |
No |
Remarks |
- |
Delayed Sound |
Observation |
No |
Remarks |
- |
Persistent train |
Observation |
Unknown |
Duration |
- |
Length |
- |
Remarks |
- |
Terminal flash |
Observation |
No |
Remarks |
- |
Fragmentation |
Observation |
No |
Remarks |
- |