Brilliant fireball explodes over North America as satellites capture flash from space (video)

Another fireball lit up the skies this week, this time over the U.S. Midwest and parts of Canada —  but unlike the last one, this one came from outer space.

The meteor burned up on the morning of Nov. 13, around 6:31 a.m. Mountain Standard Time (8:31 a.m. EST or 1331 GMT). The resulting fireball appeared to travel southeast and was visible from Alberta and Saskatchewan provinces in Canada and throughout Montana, Idaho and parts of Washington, Wyoming and North Dakota. Numerous doorbell cameras, dash cameras and cell phones captured the fiery spectacle, showing a green streak brightening for a few seconds as it streamed across the early morning sky.

Another fireball was caught on camera earlier in the week on Saturday (Nov. 9), but this one came from a very different source: a falling Starlink satellite that was burning up upon reentry into Earth’s atmosphere.

A video of a meteor on Nov. 13, 2024 captured by Matthew Craig and submitted to the American Meteor Society. (Image credit: AMS/Matthew Craig)

Based on the videos and eyewitness reports submitted to the American Meteor Society (AMS), this appears to have been a brilliant fireball. 


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