logo
Was it a plane? Was it a UFO? Bright light over Quebec skies captivates stargazers

Was it a plane? Was it a UFO? Bright light over Quebec skies captivates stargazers

CBC3 days ago
Social Sharing
With eyes turned to the skies, stargazers taking in the Perseid meteor shower on Tuesday night witnessed something out of this world.
In a publication on Facebook, the Astrolab du parc national du Mont-Mégantic in Quebec's Eastern Townships, described it as "a magnificent and luminous spiral streaking across the sky at around 10:40 p.m."
Several people in the Montreal area also witnessed the strange phenomenon and reached out to CBC News describing a bright light enveloped by a fuzzy halo and warning of a UFO sighting.
While it was certainly unusual, it wasn't really an unidentified flying object, but more likely the result of a rocket launch, according to the Astrolab.
"It was in all likelihood the second stage of an Ariane 6 rocket which was igniting its engine in order to de-orbit itself after having released the European satellite Metop-SGA1 in a polar orbit," the Facebook post explained.
The European Space Agency confirmed on its website that a weather satellite was launched Tuesday evening at 9:37 p.m. local time, from the European spaceport in Kourou, French Guiana — an overseas department of France located in South America.
The new satellite is meant to usher in "a new era of weather and climate monitoring from polar orbit."
According to astrophysicist Robert Lamontagne, the rocket's orbit is what allowed for the spectacle to be visible in Quebec.
Most of the time rocket launches are on an equatorial orbit and so will be visible near the equator, he said.
In a polar orbit, the rocket has to go around the earth circling each pole of the planet.
"So the the trajectory of that the rocket made it so that from our latitude it could be seen in Montreal or the south of Quebec," he said.
But to witness the phenomena, other factors also need to align, according to Lamontagne, including the time of launch and the altitude reached by the rocket.
"From our point of view, we were in the dark, the sun was low below the horizon, but the rocket itself was so high that it was still lit by the by the sun," he said.
And as the second stage of the rocket re-entered the earth's atmosphere, he said, "it was spinning a little bit, there was exhaust gases coming out from it and that's what people saw in the sky."
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Reaching for the stars: Montreal students' space mission
Reaching for the stars: Montreal students' space mission

CTV News

time4 hours ago

  • CTV News

Reaching for the stars: Montreal students' space mission

Concordia students launched a rocket from Northern Quebec, aiming to hit an exploration milestone in Canadian space. Genevieve Beauchemin reports. A team of Concordia University students gathered at a remote base camp on Cree territory in northern Quebec to launch the largest, most powerful student-built rocket ever made. The event captured on a livestream, may not have gone off quite as planned, still it marked an engineering breakthrough after years of effort. Cheers greeted the moment just after the countdown when a ball of white light sped up to the sky. 'This is insane,' said one student staring up at the rocket. The Space Concordia team's goal was to breach the edge of space at an altitude of 100 kilometres. Their liquid fuel rocket, Starsailor, blasted off at 5:34 am. They now say the rocket did not cross the Kármán line — the internationally recognized boundary of space. 'What we can tell you, is that it looks like the rocket burned out earlier and separated earlier than planned,' said Space Concordia's Hannah Halcro on the livestream. The liftoff was seven years in the making and sparked by an intercollegiate space race. In 2018, teams of universities and colleges entered a contest to launch a liquid fuel rocket into space. That was cancelled due to the pandemic, but the Concordia team forged ahead, determined to make history on its own terms. Over the years, more than 700 students contributed to the project, investing thousands of hours into design, testing, and development. Their rocket represented not just academic ambition, but a dream shared across generations of students. They built a space program and worked in collaboration with the Cree community in the Mistassini region to prepare for launch. Transport Canada cleared the mission for takeoff and the local airspace was closed, but two previous attempts were scrubbed due to poor weather conditions. This time, it was all systems go. But this is rocket science, and so it is hard. Some students say they feared the rocket may not launch, that it could blow up the launch tower, and so while not reaching space is not ideal, they say, it is far from a failure. 'The sky is not the limit obviously,' Space Concordia President Simon Randy told CTV News at the end of a long day. 'We have proven that we have a seat at the table of launch into space.' The team is now analyzing flight data and will look at debris to determine Starsailor's exact trajectory. Still the future engineers' hopes for the launch went far beyond expectations. 'See you in space next time,' Halcro signed off.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store