Observer | |
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Name | Richard A |
Experience Level | 2/5 |
Remarks | I'd love to hear if you manage to get other details. It was so big I was expecting to hear about it on the news! |
Location | |
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Address | , England (GB) |
Latitude | 51° 32' 25.81'' N (51.540504°) |
Longitude | 0° 0' 16.83'' W (-0.004674°) |
Elevation | 5.850646m |
Time and Duration | |
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Local Date & Time | 2019-03-30 03:52 GMT |
UT Date & Time | 2019-03-30 03:52 UT |
Duration | ≈3.5s |
Direction | |
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Moving direction | From up left to down right |
Descent Angle | 117° |
Moving | |
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Facing azimuth | 29.62° |
First azimuth | 16.71° |
First elevation | 63° |
Last azimuth | 82.95° |
Last elevation | 27° |
Brightness and color | |
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Stellar Magnitude | -12 |
Color | Light Blue, Light Green, Orange, Red, White |
Concurrent Sound | |
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Observation | No |
Remarks | - |
Delayed Sound | |
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Observation | Unknown |
Remarks | - |
Persistent train | |
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Observation | No |
Duration | - |
Length | - |
Remarks | - |
Terminal flash | |
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Observation | Yes |
Remarks | Much like a firework burst. It then immediately fragmented a bright red colour and disappeared. |
Fragmentation | |
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Observation | Yes |
Remarks | I definitely saw a small explosion. Like a pop, followed by two or three small red trails which immediately disappeared. |