Observer | |
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Name | Frankie T |
Experience Level | 3/5 |
Remarks | It was beautiful! Sparked my interest in trying to learn about what it was, I’ve enjoyed seeing lots of meteor showers, and lunar eclipses, but this was so unique! |
Location | |
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Address | Oklahoma City, OK |
Latitude | 35° 29' 59.63'' N (35.5°) |
Longitude | 97° 33' 26.03'' W (-97.56°) |
Elevation | 373m |
Time and Duration | |
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Local Date & Time | 2022-05-11 21:45 CDT |
UT Date & Time | 2022-05-12 02:45 UT |
Duration | ≈3.5s |
Direction | |
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Moving direction | From down left to up right |
Descent Angle | 10° |
Moving | |
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Facing azimuth | 180.83° |
First azimuth | 203.96° |
First elevation | 11° |
Last azimuth | 202.2° |
Last elevation | 45° |
Brightness and color | |
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Stellar Magnitude | -11 |
Color | Pink, Orange, Yellow |
Concurrent Sound | |
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Observation | No |
Remarks | - |
Delayed Sound | |
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Observation | No |
Remarks | - |
Persistent train | |
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Observation | No |
Duration | - |
Length | - |
Remarks | - |
Terminal flash | |
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Observation | Yes |
Remarks | It looked like sparks, or almost bursts of flaming glitter in the sky. Very bright, brighter than any shooting star I’ve seen, and it was a warm, pinkish orange hue. |
Fragmentation | |
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Observation | Unknown |
Remarks | - |