| Observer |
|
Name |
Cat S |
|
Experience Level |
2/5
|
|
Remarks |
I didn’t understand what degrees of the tail meant |
| Location |
|
Address |
Oregon City, OR |
|
Latitude |
45° 19' 11.2'' N (45.319779°)
|
|
Longitude |
122° 36' 38.23'' W (-122.610619°)
|
|
Elevation |
132.956268m |
| Time and Duration |
|
Local Date & Time |
2026-06-12 23:20 PDT
|
|
UT Date & Time |
2026-06-13 06:20 UT
|
|
Duration |
≈1.5s
|
| Direction |
|
Moving direction |
From up left to down right |
|
Descent Angle |
118° |
| Moving |
|
Facing azimuth |
257.58° |
|
First azimuth |
251.27° |
|
First elevation |
30° |
|
Last azimuth |
268.88° |
|
Last elevation |
24° |
| Brightness and color |
|
Stellar Magnitude |
-8 |
|
Color |
Orange, Yellow, Light Yellow, White |
| Concurrent Sound |
|
Observation |
No |
|
Remarks |
- |
| Delayed Sound |
|
Observation |
Yes |
|
Remarks |
I went inside and then a few seconds later I heard rumbles or booms. My cats heard it too, but I’m not sure it was from the fireball. |
| Persistent train |
|
Observation |
Yes |
|
Duration |
2s |
|
Length |
- |
|
Remarks |
A glowing yellow and orange train. It kind of looked like a large spark out of a campfire and then fell to nothing |
| Terminal flash |
|
Observation |
Unknown |
|
Remarks |
- |
| Fragmentation |
|
Observation |
Yes |
|
Remarks |
If fragmentation means stuff falling off the tail as it faded, then that’s what I saw |