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Watch: Fireball lights up night sky in Japan

Watch: Fireball lights up night sky in Japan

RTÉ News​15 hours ago
A flashing fireball dashed across the skies of western Japan, shocking residents and dazzling stargazers, though experts said it was a natural phenomenon and not an alien invasion.
Videos and photos emerged online of the extremely bright ball of light visible for hundreds of kilometres shortly after 11pm (3pm Irish time) local time yesterday.
"A white light I had never seen before came down from above, and it became so bright that I could clearly see the shapes of the houses around us," Yoshihiko Hamahata, who was driving in Miyazaki Prefecture, told NHK.
"It seemed like daylight. For a moment, I didn't know what had happened and was very surprised," he told the public broadcaster.
Toshihisa Maeda, head of Sendai Space Museum in the Kagoshima region in southwestern Japan, said that it was a fireball, an exceptionally bright meteor.
"It seemed to have gone into the Pacific," he added.
"People reported feeling the air vibrate," he said.
"It was as bright as the Moon."
Objects causing fireball events can exceed one metre in size, according to NASA.
Fireballs that explode in the atmosphere are technically referred to as bolides, although the terms fireballs and bolides are often used interchangeably.
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Watch: Fireball lights up night sky in Japan
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RTÉ News​

time15 hours ago

  • RTÉ News​

Watch: Fireball lights up night sky in Japan

A flashing fireball dashed across the skies of western Japan, shocking residents and dazzling stargazers, though experts said it was a natural phenomenon and not an alien invasion. Videos and photos emerged online of the extremely bright ball of light visible for hundreds of kilometres shortly after 11pm (3pm Irish time) local time yesterday. "A white light I had never seen before came down from above, and it became so bright that I could clearly see the shapes of the houses around us," Yoshihiko Hamahata, who was driving in Miyazaki Prefecture, told NHK. "It seemed like daylight. For a moment, I didn't know what had happened and was very surprised," he told the public broadcaster. Toshihisa Maeda, head of Sendai Space Museum in the Kagoshima region in southwestern Japan, said that it was a fireball, an exceptionally bright meteor. "It seemed to have gone into the Pacific," he added. "People reported feeling the air vibrate," he said. "It was as bright as the Moon." Objects causing fireball events can exceed one metre in size, according to NASA. Fireballs that explode in the atmosphere are technically referred to as bolides, although the terms fireballs and bolides are often used interchangeably.

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