Observer | |
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Name | Cis V |
Experience Level | 4/5 |
Remarks | - |
Location | |
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Address | Nijlen, Vlaams Gewest (BE) |
Latitude | 51° 8' 19.63'' N (51.14°) |
Longitude | 4° 39' 5.73'' E (4.65°) |
Elevation | 7.26m |
Time and Duration | |
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Local Date & Time | 2022-11-10 22:02 CET |
UT Date & Time | 2022-11-10 21:02 UT |
Duration | ≈3.5s |
Direction | |
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Moving direction | From up right to down left |
Descent Angle | 251° |
Moving | |
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Facing azimuth | 95° |
First azimuth | 80° |
First elevation | 45° |
Last azimuth | 10° |
Last elevation | 30° |
Brightness and color | |
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Stellar Magnitude | -5 |
Color | Light Blue, Light Green, White |
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 | Yes |
Duration | 2s |
Length | 10° |
Remarks | The persistent train was only in the middle section of the meteor, which was the brightest |
Terminal flash | |
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Observation | Yes |
Remarks | The flash was in the middle portion of the meteor. That part of the meteor (+ the persistent train) stayed visible a bit longer than the rest of the meteor (even than the end point of the meteor) |
Fragmentation | |
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Observation | Yes |
Remarks | The middle part of the meteor got brighter and brighter (and changed from white to blue and green) while the meteoroid moved further. When the end point of the meteor was seen, I could still see the middle part, which was much brighter. In between the middle part and the end part of the meteor was a gap, which clearly means there was fragmentation. |