Close X
Wednesday, November 20, 2024
ADVT 
National

Great balls of fire! Flash across Calgary night sky turns out to be rocket body

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 24 Feb, 2015 10:36 AM

    CALGARY — A Calgary photographer who captured a fireball streaking across the night sky says he thought he'd witnessed a plane crashing or a meteor breaking up.

    But Neil Zeller says NASA says it was a rocket body returning to Earth after a Chinese satellite launch in December.

    Zeller was photographing the northern lights west of Calgary around 11 p.m. on Monday when he caught a flash out of the corner of his eye.

    He swung his camera around and was able to get four, long-exposure shots as the unusual light streaked across the sky.

    Zeller says it was a "one in a million" experience and a bit of a fluke that he was able to get the photos at all.

    He credits the brightness of the aurora borealis Monday night.

    “A lot of times a bright object in a dark sky will overexpose. You’ll just get a beam of light," he said. "For me to get the individual streaks of light, the individual parts that were burning up in the sky, it was basically a factor of how bright the auroras were.”

    Zeller explained why the initial sighting was confusing.

    “I thought it might have been a plane crashing, just because it was in so many pieces and it was such a big ball," he said. "(But) it didn’t appear to be falling. It just kept going across the sky.

    "So then I thought maybe a large meteor was breaking up, but it was just way too slow.”

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Anti-terror bill and civil-liberties: a familar tug-of-war for Harper

    Anti-terror bill and civil-liberties: a familar tug-of-war for Harper
    OTTAWA — As the prime minister and his cabinet craft the latest anti-terror legislation, they'll be thrust into a familiar balancing act between civil liberties and public safety.

    Anti-terror bill and civil-liberties: a familar tug-of-war for Harper

    Flu shot lowers risk of rare side-effect in most seasons for most people

    Flu shot lowers risk of rare side-effect in most seasons for most people
    TORONTO — A new study suggests that for most people in most flu seasons, getting a flu shot actually lowers their risk of developing a rare neurological condition that has been linked to the vaccine.

    Flu shot lowers risk of rare side-effect in most seasons for most people

    2 Hamilton public works employees fired for bringing pot-laced brownies to work

    2 Hamilton public works employees fired for bringing pot-laced brownies to work
    HAMILTON — Bringing pot-laced brownies to work has led to the firing of two public works employees in Hamilton.

    2 Hamilton public works employees fired for bringing pot-laced brownies to work

    Baird not expecting Fahmy's immediate release Thursday, official says

    Baird not expecting Fahmy's immediate release Thursday, official says
    OTTAWA — Foreign Affairs Minister John Baird doesn't expect to immediately secure the release of imprisoned Egyptian-Canadian journalist Mohamed Fahmy when he visits Cairo on Thursday, a government official says.

    Baird not expecting Fahmy's immediate release Thursday, official says

    Dalhousie University gives Halifax police copies of misogynistic Facebook posts

    Dalhousie University gives Halifax police copies of misogynistic Facebook posts
    HALIFAX — Dalhousie University says it has given Halifax police copies of Facebook postings of sexually violent comments allegedly made by male dentistry students about their female classmates.

    Dalhousie University gives Halifax police copies of misogynistic Facebook posts

    Mountie denies he colluded to fabricate details of Robert Dziekanski's death

    VANCOUVER — A Mountie who stunned Robert Dziekanski with a Taser the night the Polish immigrant died denied allegations Tuesday that he and his fellow officers colluded to fabricate a story to justify their actions.

    Mountie denies he colluded to fabricate details of Robert Dziekanski's death