Reports Report 1073d (Event 1073-2013)

Observer
Name First Name L
Experience Level 3/5
Remarks This single meteor was far larger, more definite, and with specific boundaries/length of time than any other meteor seen during a meteor shower.
Location
Address Lubbock, TX
Latitude 33° 33' 44.63'' N (33.562396°)
Longitude 101° 55' 21.74'' W (-101.922705°)
Elevation 993.406189m
Time and Duration
Local Date & Time 2013-05-14 21:32 CDT
UT Date & Time 2013-05-15 02:32 UT
Duration ≈7.5s
Direction
Moving direction From right to left
Descent Angle 270°
Moving
Facing azimuth 12°
First azimuth
First elevation 25°
Last azimuth
Last elevation 14°
Brightness and color
Stellar Magnitude -16
Color Blue, Orange, Yellow, Light Yellow, Red,
Concurrent Sound
Observation No
Remarks -
Delayed Sound
Observation No
Remarks -
Persistent train
Observation Yes
Duration 9s
Length 20°
Remarks I can't remember the order, but it was bright and had all colors of fire. The train eventually disipated, but stayed the pretty long as it continued over the sky.
Terminal flash
Observation No
Remarks -
Fragmentation
Observation No
Remarks -